ttip and the investment court system: a new (and improved...
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TTIP and the Investment Court System: A
New (and Improved?) Paradigm for Investor-
State Adjudication
In response to the recent outcry against the investor-state dispute settlement (“ISDS”) system, the negotia-tors to the proposed EU-U.S. Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (“TTIP”) have developed an alternative means of investment dispute resolution: the so-called Investment Court System (“ICS”). News agencies, political leaders, and legal scholars have published myriad reactions to the proposal, many of them mixed. This Note evaluates the ICS in light of the most cogent critiques lodged against ISDS, before considering three alternative modes of investment dis-pute resolution: a return to the pre-ISDS era, the adoption of a rule-of-law ratings mechanism, and a reformed and updated version of ISDS. Due to the problems inherent in the design of the ICS—including most notably the possibility that its judges would be beholden to state interests—this Note argues that it presents an imperfect solution to ISDS’s critiques. In-stead, a revised version of ISDS, updated to incorpo-rate certain cost-reduction strategies, regulatory safe-guards, and a multilateral ISDS appellate mechanism, theoretically offers the most promising long-term ave-nue for dealing with the unique circumstances inher-ent in investor-state disputes. However, because of the practical and political realities of TTIP, namely the souring of public sentiment towards anything ISDS, the most viable solution open to negotiators is a return to the pre-ISDS era.
INTRODUCTION ................................................................................. 180
I. THE HISTORY OF ISDS AND THE ICS ...................................... 183
A. The ISDS Model ............................................................ 184
B. Critiques of ISDS ........................................................... 186
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1. Procedural Critiques ................................................. 186
2. Functional Critiques ................................................. 187
C. The Investment Court System’s Dispute Settlement Procedure ....................................................................... 189
D. The ICS’s Other Notable Innovations ........................... 192
II. THE ICS—A NEW (AND IMPROVED?) PARADIGM FOR
INVESTOR-STATE ADJUDICATION ........................................... 193
A. The ICS as a Response to ISDS’s Critiques .................. 194
1. Consistency and Predictability ................................. 194
2. Transparency ............................................................ 195
3. Impartiality and Independence ................................. 196
4. Costs of Adjudication ............................................... 197
5. Allocation of Power and State Sovereignty: The Trojan Horse Complaint ........................................... 200
6. A Formal Appellate Mechanism .............................. 202
B. Other Complications Inherent in the ICS Model ........... 203
1. Attracting Qualified Jurists ....................................... 203
2. The Risk of Capture .................................................. 203
3. Extrapolation to an International Investment Court . 207
C. An Imperfect Solution ................................................... 208
III. ALTERNATIVE SOLUTIONS TO ISDS’S CRITIQUES ................... 208
A. The Osgoode Plan .......................................................... 209
1. The Osgoode Plan as a Response to ISDS’s Critiques ................................................................... 210
2. Other Complications Inherent in the Osgoode Plan . 212
3. An Inward-Looking Approach to Outward-Facing Challenges ................................................................ 213
B. A Rule-of-Law Ratings Mechanism .............................. 213
1. Rule-of-Law Ratings and the TTIP Agreement ....... 215
2. Other Complications Inherent in the Rule-of-Law Proposal .................................................................... 217
3. A Finite Improvement .............................................. 218
C. Reforming the Existing ISDS Framework ..................... 218
1. Transparency ............................................................ 219
2. Cost-Reduction Strategies ........................................ 219
3. Regulatory Safeguards .............................................. 221
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4. A Multilateral ISDS Appellate Mechanism ............. 221
5. Timing and Political Will ......................................... 224
6. Theory Meets Practice .............................................. 225
CONCLUSION .................................................................................... 226
INTRODUCTION
In July 2013, representatives from the United States and Eu-ropean Union met in Washington, D.C. to begin negotiations on the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (“TTIP”), a proposed bilateral agreement intended to promote trade and economic growth between the two regions.
1 The delegates’ stated goal was to come to
terms on an “ambitious, comprehensive, [and] balanced” bilateral trade and investment agreement that “shall provide for the reciprocal liberalisation of trade in goods and services as well as rules on trade-related issues.”
2 At the time of this writing, TTIP negotiators have
participated in fifteen rounds of week-long negotiations, and have addressed issues relating to regulatory coherence, technical barriers to trade, customs and trade facilitation, and intellectual property rights.
3 But arguably the most contentious question faced by TTIP’s
representatives is whether to include a provision for investor-state dispute settlement (“ISDS”) within the agreement’s regulatory framework.
4 ISDS has been the subject of fierce opposition amongst
EU Member States, interest groups, and citizens, who argue that it (among other things) unduly protects corporate interests at the ex-pense of environmental standards and taxpayer protections.
5
1. European Commission Press Release IP/13/691, EU and US Conclude First Round
of TTIP Negotiations in Washington (July 12, 2013), http://trade.ec.europa.eu/doclib/press/
index.cfm?id=941.
2. Council Directive 11103/13, Directive for the Negotiation on the Transatlantic
Trade and Investment Partnership between the European Union and the United States of
America 2 (June 17, 2013), data.consilium.europa.eu/doc/document/ST-11103-2013-DCL-
1/en/pdf.
3. Commission Report of the 15th Round of Negotiations for the Transatlantic Trade
and Investment Partnership: October 2016, at 1–2 (Oct. 21, 2016), http://trade.ec.
europa.eu/doclib/docs/2016/october/tradoc_155027.pdf.
4. See, e.g., Andrew Grice, TTIP: Activists Triumph as Contentious US Free Trade
Deal Clause Suspended, INDEP. (London) (Jan. 13, 2015), http://www.independent.co.uk/
news/uk/politics/ttip-activists-triumph-as-contentious-us-free-trade-deal-clause-suspended-
9976090.html.
5. See, e.g., EUROPEAN ENVTL. BUREAU, REGULATORY ROLLBACK: HOW TTIP PUTS
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Just over two years after those negotiations began, on Sep-tember 16, 2015, the European Commission (“the Commission”) published a press release proposing a novel alternative to ISDS: a TTIP-centric
6 Investment Court System (“ICS”).
7 If ratified as part
of the larger TTIP agreement, the Commission believes that its pro-posal, which was minimally updated and “finalized” on November 12, 2015,
8 would usher in several important changes to the interna-
tional investment dispute settlement system. First, it claims that the ICS would codify a shift away from the ad hoc ISDS method in favor of a formalized tribunal system. It insists that such a system would provide more stability and predictability than ISDS by implementing a structure comparable to more established domestic and internation-al courts,
9 similar to the International Criminal Court (“ICC”) and the
International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea (“ITLOS”). In addi-tion, the Commission believes that a TTIP investment tribunal could provide the impetus for the establishment of a permanent, multilateral International Investment Court. It envisions such a court eventually replacing “all investment dispute resolution mechanisms provided in EU agreements, EU Member States’ agreements with third countries and in trade and investment treaties concluded between non-EU countries.”
10
Over the last fourteen months, the Commission’s ICS pro-posal has sent waves through the international law community.
THE ENVIRONMENT AT RISK (Jan. 21, 2014), http://www.eeb.org/EEB/?LinkServID=
4AFDDA9F-5056-B741-DB18FBAC26DE3743&showMeta=0; Patrick Gleeson, TTIP:
Chemical Corporations Against Safety Protections, ECOLOGIST (Dec. 24, 2014), http://www.
theecologist.org/News/news_analysis/2682031/ttip_chemical_corporations_against_safety_p
rotections.html; Colin Todhunter, TTIP: An Agenda for Corporate Plunder,
COUNTERPUNCH (June 5, 2015), http://www.counterpunch.org/2015/06/05/ttip-an-agenda-
for-corporate-plunder.
6. The proposed Investment Court System is “TTIP-centric” in the sense that the
court would only have jurisdiction to adjudicate disputes arising within the TTIP framework
(i.e. those between an American or European investor and an EU Member State or the
United States, respectively).
7. European Commission Press Release IP/15/5651, Commission Proposes New
Investment Court System for TTIP and Other EU Trade and Investment Negotiations (Sept.
16, 2015) [hereinafter IP/15/5651], http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_IP-15-5651_en.htm.
8. European Commission Press Release IP/15/6059, EU Finalises Proposal for
Investment Protection and Court System for TTIP (Nov. 12, 2015) [hereinafter IP/15/6059],
http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_IP-15-6059_en.htm.
9. Commission Concept Paper on Investment in TTIP and Beyond—The Path for
Reform 1 (May 5, 2015), http://trade.ec.europa.eu/doclib/docs/2015/may/tradoc_153408.
PDF.
10. IP/15/5651, supra note 7.
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182 COLUMBIA JOURNAL OF TRANSNATIONAL LAW [55:178
Meanwhile, divergent opinions on the plan have been bandied about by political and judicial leaders,
11 news outlets,
12 think tanks,
13 and
myriad governmental14
and non-governmental organizations.15
But surprisingly few commentators have considered whether and to what
11. See, e.g., TTIP Trade Talks: German Judges Oppose New Investor Courts, BBC
(Feb. 5, 2016) [hereinafter TTIP Trade Talks], http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-
35503885, (reporting that the German Association of Judges announced its opinion that
there was “neither a legal basis nor an actual need” for the ICS).
12. See, e.g., Natacha Cingotti, Opinion, TTIP’s Proposed Investment Court System
Should Fool No One, EURACTIV (Feb. 22, 2016), http://www.euractiv.com/section/trade-
society/opinion/ttips-proposed-investment-court-system-should-fool-no-one (arguing that
the ICS should be “scrapped completely” because “there is no need for special investors’
privileges and tribunals in TTIP”); Douglas Singleterry, Op-Ed: International Investment
Court’s Time Has Come: European Commission Has Proposed a System to Promote
Fairness. Obama Should Get Onboard, NAT’L L.J. (Dec. 14, 2015), http://www.
nationallawjournal.com/id=1202744684325/OpEd-International-Investment-Courts-Time-
Has-Come?slreturn=20160108125020 (encouraging the Obama administration to support the
Commission’s proposal “both to strengthen the investor dispute resolution mechanism and
mitigate a prime source of controversy over trade agreements”).
13. See, e.g., MIRIAM SAPIRO, TRANSATLANTIC TRADE AND INVESTMENT
NEGOTIATIONS: REACHING A CONSENSUS ON INVESTOR-STATE DISPUTE SETTLEMENT 1
(2015), https://www.brookings.edu/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/GlobalViews5Oct2015_
FINAL.pdf (citing the modern investor-state dispute resolution debate and recent reforms to
ISDS in arguing that “the reasons for maintaining [ISDS] in future agreements are more
persuasive than those supporting elimination”); Ted Bromund et al., The U.S. Should Reject
the European Commission’s Proposed Investment Court, HERITAGE FOUND.: ISSUE BRIEF 1
(Nov. 13, 2015), http://www.heritage.org/research/reports/2015/11/the-us-should-reject-the-
european-commissions-proposed-investment-court (calling on American negotiators to
“firmly resist” the Commission’s ICS proposal, “which departs radically from the well-
functioning ISDS system”).
14. See, e.g., IP/15/6059, supra note 8 (praising the finalized proposal’s “additional
improvements on access” to the ICS for small and medium sized companies); IP/15/5651,
supra note 7 (characterizing the Commission’s proposal as a major improvement over the
existing ISDS system in terms of transparency, state sovereignty, and the proper adjudication
of investor-state disputes).
15. See, e.g., Peter Chase & Sean Heather, Investment Protection: If It Ain’t Broke,
Why “Fix” It?, U.S. CHAMBER COM. (Oct. 1, 2015, 12:00 PM), https://www.uschamber.com/
issue-brief/investment-protection-if-it-ain-t-broke-why-fix-it (“While the Chamber [of
Commerce] understands the political difficulties the European Commission is facing when it
comes to investment protection in TTIP and other trade agreements, [the ICS] proposal must
be viewed only as a starting point for negotiations . . . . It must be dramatically improved
before we can support it.”); ‘New’ Investment Court System Still Privileges Foreign
Investors under EU-US Trade Deal, TRANSPORT & ENV’T (Sept. 16, 2015, 12:54 PM),
https://www.transportenvironment.org/press/%E2%80%98new%E2%80%99-investment-
court-system-still-privileges-foreign-investors-under-eu-us-trade-deal (arguing that the
Commission’s proposal “is a mere rebranding exercise of Investor-State Dispute Settlement”
that “will resolve none of the fundamental concerns about granting special privileges for
foreign investors, undermining national laws and bypassing domestic courts”).
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2016] TTIP AND THE INVESTMENT COURT SYSTEM 183
extent the Commission’s proposal would systematically address the critiques that have been lodged against the ISDS regime. Even fewer have asked whether TTIP’s negotiators should consider any alterna-tive solutions to ISDS’s problems, or whether any such alternatives even exist. This Note addresses each of these important considera-tions, using them as a springboard to show that the ICS represents a strategically imperfect solution to the modern challenges faced by the international investment dispute settlement regime.
Part I of this Note offers a brief introduction to the ISDS sys-tem and the most cogent critiques that have been lodged against it, in order to provide some context for the Commission’s model system, the ICS. It then lays out the basic contours of the TTIP-centric ICS, as envisioned in the Commission’s November 2015 proposal. Part II assesses the extent to which the ICS responds to the supposed prob-lems inherent in the ISDS model, in an effort to both determine its viability as a standalone juridical mechanism and highlight possible reasons for concern. Part III analyzes possible non-ICS solutions to ISDS’s current problems, including a return to the pre-ISDS era—when investor-state arbitrations were handled almost exclusively by the host country’s domestic court system—and the adoption of an in-ternational rule-of-law ratings mechanism. Part III concludes by ar-guing that ISDS, if revised and updated to reflect modern-day reali-ties, theoretically offers the most promising means for addressing the unique challenges inherent in investor-state disputes. However, due to the practical and political realities of TTIP, the only viable solution available to negotiators is a return to the pre-ISDS era.
I. THE HISTORY OF ISDS AND THE ICS
Over the course of the last century, the increasingly global-ized nature of the international marketplace has incited unprecedent-ed levels of cross-border investment and, as a direct result, disputes between investors and foreign countries.
16 The proper adjudication
of these disputes, which often involve complex, cross-jurisdictional questions of law and commerce, arguably lies outside the competen-cy of domestic courts, which some believe have a high potential for bias when deciding cases lodged against their own government.
17 In
16. See generally U.N. Conference on Trade & Development, Reform of Investor-State
Dispute Settlement: In Search of a Roadmap (June 2013) [hereinafter Reform of ISDS],
http://unctad.org/en/PublicationsLibrary/webdiaepcb2013d4_en.pdf.
17. Fact Sheet, Office of the U.S. Trade Representative, Investor-State Dispute
Settlement (ISDS) (Mar. 11, 2015), https://ustr.gov/about-us/policy-offices/press-office/fact-
sheets/2015/march/investor-state-dispute-settlement-isds. See also Marco Bronckers, Is
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184 COLUMBIA JOURNAL OF TRANSNATIONAL LAW [55:178
response to these concerns, national governments have adapted their legal structures to be more “investor friendly,” often by entering into bilateral and multilateral International Investment Agreements (“IIAs”)
18—treaties that set forth the terms of investment that will
prevail between two or more countries and provide the legal basis for the ISDS model of investment arbitration.
19 Given that the Commis-
sion devised the new ICS to operate as a direct successor to ISDS, their decision cannot be fully understood without consideration of both ISDS’s contours and its most notable critiques.
A. The ISDS Model
The generic term “investor-state dispute settlement” broadly refers to the heterogeneous category of adjudication regimes that all share one basic feature: they empower private individuals and corpo-rations wronged under an investment agreement to bring claims against foreign signatory states. More specifically, ISDS can be thought of as the set of legal instruments within IIAs that allow in-vestors to bypass domestic courts in favor of a “neutral, international arbitration procedure” for resolving conflicts with host country gov-ernments.
20 By affording impartial, independent arbitral bodies full
control over investor-state dispute settlement, ISDS’s “swifter, cheaper, and more flexible” design was expected to lower the overall cost of investments and make IIA commitments more enforceable.
21
Investor-State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) Superior to Litigation Before Domestic Courts?:
An EU View on Bilateral Trade Agreements, 18 J. INT’L ECON. L. 655, 671 (2015) (arguing
that, in order to provide a viable forum for investor-state adjudication, domestic courts must
assure foreign investors that they can adequately “deal with their claims with sufficient
independence and efficiency,” and finding further that “on both parameters courts in more
than a third of the EU Member States are perceived to perform badly”).
18. MARGARET L. MOSES, THE PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICES OF INTERNATIONAL
COMMERCIAL ARBITRATION 231 (2d ed. 2012).
19. See generally U.N. Conference on Trade & Development, Investor-State Dispute
Settlement: UNCTAD Series on Issues in International Investment Agreements II: A Sequel
18, 30–31 (May 2014) [hereinafter Issues in International Investment Agreements], http://
unctad.org/en/PublicationsLibrary/diaeia2013d2_en.pdf.
20. Fact Sheet, Office of the U.S. Trade Representative, supra note 17.
21. Issues in International Investment Agreements, supra note 19, at 13. These lower
costs and decreased investment risk are partly the byproduct, supporters argue, of ISDS’s
ability to cut down substantially on the transaction costs associated with investor-state
dispute resolution. Every national court employs a unique set of procedural and substantive
rules, and they all inevitably boast a distinct body of relevant statutory provisions and case
law. In order to resolve their legal claims, then, foreign investors must often spend
substantial amounts of time and resources learning to navigate these novel and often unique
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2016] TTIP AND THE INVESTMENT COURT SYSTEM 185
Because the legal basis for ISDS resides within a decentralized net-work of more than 3000 IIAs,
22 there are several different iterations
of these general themes. However, virtually all ISDS provisions cen-ter on four broad-based guarantees: (1) “protection against discrimi-nation” (a.k.a. “national treatment” and “most favored nation” sta-tus); (2) protection against government actions that expropriate without compensating the value of an investment; (3) “protection against ‘unfair and inequitable treatment’”; and (4) protection against government actions restricting capital flows.
23
Although the first ISDS provision appeared in the 1959 bilat-eral Treaty for the Promotion and Protection of Investments between Germany and Pakistan,
24 only a handful of ISDS cases were brought
before 1996.25
Indeed, ISDS only entered into widespread use after the upsurge in bilateral investment treaties (“BITs”) that occurred in the 1990s and early 2000s.
26 Since 2001, the cumulative number of
ISDS cases has increased by more than 500%, with a total of fifty-nine cases brought in 2013 alone.
27 Nonetheless, public awareness of
legal systems. In addition, differences amongst national courts in regard to judicial
congestion, logistics, and delays in the administration of justice mean that aggrieved parties
in some jurisdictions will have to work harder, wait longer, and spend more to secure a
remedy than in others. See generally Maria Dakolias, Court Performance Around the
World: A Comparative Perspective, 2 YALE HUM. RTS. & DEV. L.J. 87 (1999). Without the
protections afforded by ISDS (or a comparably harmonized multilateral system), potential
investors would have to account for each of these contingencies prior to investing—a
process that would increase the overall cost of the investment and which could, as a result,
lead to deadweight losses.
22. U.N. Conference on Trade & Dev., Recent Trends in IIAs and ISDS 2 (Feb. 2015)
[hereinafter Recent Trends in IIAs], http://unctad.org/en/PublicationsLibrary/
webdiaepcb2015d1_en.pdf.
23. MARTA LATEK, INVESTOR-STATE DISPUTE SETTLEMENT (ISDS): STATE OF PLAY
AND PROSPECTS FOR REFORM 2–3 (Jan. 21, 2014), http://www.europarl.europa.eu/RegData/
bibliotheque/briefing/2014/130710/LDM_BRI(2014)130710_REV2_EN.pdf.
24. Treaty for the Promotion & Protection of Investments, Pak.-Federal Republic of
Ger., Nov. 25, 1959, 25 U.N.T.S. 1963.
25. Recent Trends in IIAs, supra note 22, at 5.
26. That upsurge was largely the result of two compounding developments: (1) the
1998 failure of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development’s (“OECD”)
negotiations towards a Multilateral Agreement on Investment (“MAI”), and (2) the 2001
failure of the Doha Round of trade negotiations. See generally Efraim Chalamish, The
Future of Bilateral Investment Treaties: A De Facto Multilateral Agreement?, 34 BROOK. J.
INT’L L. 303 (2009); Philip De Man & Jan Wouters, Improving the Framework of
Negotiations on International Investment Agreements, in FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT AND
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT: THE LAW AND ECONOMICS OF INTERNATIONAL INVESTMENT
AGREEMENTS 233 (Olivier de Schutter et al. eds., 2013).
27. Recent Trends in IIAs, supra note 22, at 5.
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186 COLUMBIA JOURNAL OF TRANSNATIONAL LAW [55:178
ISDS and the controversy that now surrounds it are far more recent phenomena, prompted by the inclusion of ISDS provisions in the 2014 EU-Canada Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (“CETA”),
28 the Trans-Pacific Partnership (“TPP”),
29 and TTIP.
30
The high stakes involved in these “super-regional agreements,” com-bined with the EU’s general anti-American sentiment and aversion to globalization and capitalism,
31 have turned ISDS into an extremely
contentious subject, and have prompted several commentators to cri-tique its procedural and substantive foundations.
B. Critiques of ISDS
1. Procedural Critiques
On a procedural level, commentators point to three primary critiques. First, they accuse ISDS of lacking transparency, since many arbitrations are predicated on strict non-disclosure agree-ments.
32 Second, some critics take issue with the comparative lack of
independence and impartiality amongst arbitrators as opposed to judges.
33 Arbitrators are appointed by a disputing party (or other
28. Although the original text of CETA, which was released by the EU and Canada in
August 2014, included an ISDS provision, the agreement was revised in February 2016 to
incorporate elements of its own Investment Court System. Like TTIP, the CETA
adjudication system is to be modeled off the EC’s November 2015 revised proposal, but has
yet to be formally ratified and implemented. European Commission Press Release
IP/16/399, CETA: EU and Canada Agree on New Approach on Investment in Trade
Agreement (Feb. 29, 2016) [hereinafter IP/16/399], http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_IP-
16-399_en.htm.
29. Trans-Pacific Partnership ch. 28, Feb. 4, 2016, OFF. U.S. TRADE REPRESENTATIVE,
https://ustr.gov/sites/default/files/TPP-Final-Text-Dispute-Settlement.pdf (signed by all
parties but not yet in force).
30. CHRISTIAN TIETJE ET AL., THE IMPACT OF INVESTOR-STATE-DISPUTE SETTLEMENT
(ISDS) IN THE TRANSATLANTIC TRADE AND INVESTMENT PARTNERSHIP 47 (2014) (study
prepared for the Minister for Foreign Trade & Development Cooperation, Ministry of
Foreign Affairs, the Netherlands).
31. Ralph Alexander Lorz, Germany, The Transatlantic Trade and Investment
Partnership and Investment-Dispute Settlement: Observations on a Paradox, COLUM. FDI
PERSPECTIVES, Oct. 13, 2014, at 1, http://ccsi.columbia.edu/files/2013/10/No-132-Lorz-
FINAL.pdf.
32. See, e.g., Barnali Choudhury, Recapturing Public Power: Is Investment
Arbitration’s Engagement of the Public Interest Contributing to the Democratic Deficit?, 41
VAND. J. TRANSNAT’L L. 775, 786 (2008); Dora Marta Gruner, Note, Accounting for the
Public Interest in International Arbitration: The Need for Procedural and Structural
Reform, 41 COLUM. J. TRANSNAT’L L. 923, 932 (2003).
33. See, e.g., NATHALIE BERNASCONI-OSTERWALDER ET AL., ARBITRATOR
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“appointing authority”) on a case-by-case basis, and are not subject to safeguards regarding personal and professional conflicts of inter-est. As a result, commentators have maintained that “arbitrator bias arising from diverse fact patterns and relationships pepper [investor-state] disputes, prolonging proceedings and opening ultimate awards up to strong critique.”
34 Finally, the non-continuity of personnel
from arbitration to arbitration implies to some critics the possibility of inconsistent, arbitrary, and/or unpredictable decision-making, as different arbitrators apply diverging interpretations of the same IIA provisions.
35
2. Functional Critiques
More substantively, critics also object to ISDS on functional grounds. For example, some have argued that ISDS, by combining elements of both arbitrative and judicial review systems, forces states to “consent to arbitration with an unknown number of investors who may have invested or may invest in the future in their countries.”
36
In so doing, ISDS arguably engenders an “elite arbitration indus-try,”
37 often characterized by extremely high legal and arbitrator fees
and ethically perilous third-party investment-oriented funding.38
In addition, some scholars have accused investor-state adjudication of codifying a “new colonialism,” whereby large investors and states can exploit and subjugate their weaker compatriots.
39 But most egre-
giously, critics contend, ISDS operates like a “Trojan Horse” that en-ables foreign corporations to illicitly and non-transparently challenge
INDEPENDENCE AND IMPARTIALITY: EXAMINING THE DUAL ROLE OF ARBITRATOR AND
COUNSEL (Oct. 2010), http://www.iisd.org/pdf/2011/dci_2010_arbitrator_independence.pdf
(prepared for the IV Annual Forum for Developing Country Investment Negotiators).
34. Id. at 2; see also Charles H. Brower, II, Structure, Legitimacy, and NAFTA’s
Investment Chapter, 36 VAND. J. TRANSNAT’L L. 37, 78–79 (2003).
35. Anna Joubin-Bret, Why We Need a Global Appellate Mechanism for International
Investment Law, COLUM. FDI PERSPECTIVES, Apr. 27, 2015, at 1–2, http://ccsi.columbia.edu/
files/2013/10/No-146-Joubin-Bret-FINAL.pdf.
36. MARKUS KRAJEWSKI, MODALITIES FOR INVESTMENT PROTECTION AND INVESTOR-
STATE DISPUTE SETTLEMENT (ISDS) IN TTIP FROM A TRADE UNION PERSPECTIVE 7 (2014),
http://library.fes.de/pdf-files/bueros/bruessel/11044.pdf.
37. LATEK, supra note 23, at 1.
38. See EUROPEAN COMM’N, INVESTOR-TO-STATE DISPUTE SETTLEMENT (ISDS): SOME
FACTS AND FIGURES 9 (March 12, 2015), http://trade.ec.europa.eu/doclib/docs/2015/
january/tradoc_153046.pdf.
39. Howard Mann, International Investment Agreements: Building the New
Colonialism?, 97 ASIL PROC. 247, 247 (2003).
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public health, environmental, and social protections that threaten their profit margins.
40 Succinctly put, ISDS “give[s] foreign firms a
special right to apply to a secretive tribunal of highly paid corporate lawyers for compensation whenever a government passes a law to, say, discourage smoking, protect the environment or prevent a nucle-ar catastrophe.”
41 As a result, critics argue that ISDS empowers cor-
porations at the expense of sovereign states’ courts and legislatures, both creating a “chilling effect” on state regulatory powers
42 and sub-
jecting sovereign states to the “caprice” of multinational enterprises (“MNEs”).
43
Although the majority of ISDS’s critics are European,44
sev-eral prominent Americans have recently come out against ISDS pro-visions as well. Most notably, in December 2014 the Democratic members of the Ways and Means Committee of the U.S. House of Representatives published a letter to President Barack Obama formal-ly critiquing ISDS. In it they argue that the ISDS provisions in TTIP and other BITs “advantage[] foreign investors over domestic ones and threaten[] US laws, regulations, and judicial decisions protecting health and public safety . . . [by] provid[ing] foreign investors the right to either bypass our own courts entirely or to undermine them by challenging their results before panels of private arbitrators.”
45
40. See, e.g., Yannick Radi, The Application of the Most-Favoured-Nation Clause to
the Dispute Settlement Provisions of Bilateral Investment Treaties: Domesticating the
‘Trojan Horse’, 18 EUR. J. INT’L LAW 757 (2007).
41. The Arbitration Game, ECONOMIST (Oct. 11, 2014), http://www.economist.com/
news/finance-and-economics/21623756-governments-are-souring-treaties-protect-foreign-
investors-arbitration.
42. TIETJE ET AL., supra note 30. Regulatory chill theorists believe that government
actors, faced with the possibility of substantial ISDS-related penalties, will elect not to adopt
legitimate regulatory initiatives (for example, those aimed at protecting the environment,
public health, consumer welfare, natural resources, etc.) for fear of investor-initiated
adjudicative proceedings. For an in-depth evaluation of the “regulatory chill” effect, see Id.
at 9, 39–48.
43. Lorz, supra note 31, at 1.
44. Indeed, opposition to ISDS within Europe has grown so fierce that Cecilia
Malmström, the European Commissioner for Trade, has declared ISDS “the most toxic
acronym in Europe.” Paul Ames, ISDS: The Most Toxic Acronym in Europe, POLITICO
(Sept. 17, 2015, 4:28 PM), http://www.politico.eu/article/isds-the-most-toxic-acronym-in-
europe.
45. Letter from Bill Pascrell, Representative of N.J., U.S. House of Representatives,
Lloyd Doggett, Representative of Tex., U.S. House of Representatives, Linda T. Sanchez,
Representative of Cal., U.S. House of Representatives, John Lewis, Representative of Ga.,
U.S. House of Representatives, and Jim McDermott, Representative of Wash., U.S. House of
Representatives, to Barack Obama, President of the U.S. (Dec. 17, 2014),
https://pascrell.house.gov/media-center/press-releases/pascrell-ways-and-means-democrats-
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That said, American critics (the Ways and Means Committee Mem-bers notwithstanding) tend to focus on ISDS’s lack of a formal, effec-tive appeals process,
46 while maintaining that the ISDS process gen-
erally strikes a careful balance “between investor protections and regulatory prerogatives.”
47
Each of the foregoing critiques has likely impacted the Com-mission’s decision to reject ISDS and design a new Investment Court System within the TTIP agreement. Indeed, in the September 2015 press release introducing its new model for investor-state dispute res-olution, the Commission noted that its proposal “builds on the sub-stantial input received from the European Parliament, Member States, national parliaments and stakeholders through the public consultation held on ISDS.”
48 The Investment Court System’s design, then, can
be understood as a direct response to ISDS’s perceived failures, and its potential effectiveness should be assessed in part by the degree to which it responds to those same concerns.
C. The Investment Court System’s Dispute Settlement Procedure
The Commission’s proposed ICS intends to provide a process of investor-state dispute resolution that “ensure[s] that [TTIP-related] investment disputes will be adjudicated in full accordance with the rule of law.”
49 Much like the World Trade Organization’s (“WTO”)
dispute settlement procedure,50
the proposal establishes a process of
urge-president-obama-to-exclude.
46. See, e.g., David A. Gantz, An Appellate Mechanism for Review of Arbitral
Decisions in Investor-State Disputes: Prospects and Challenges, 39 VAND. J. TRANSNAT’L
L. 39 (2006); Barton Legum, Appellate Mechanisms for Investment Arbitration: Worth a
Second Look for the Trans-Pacific Partnership and the Proposed EU-US FTA?, in
RESHAPING THE INVESTOR-STATE DISPUTE SETTLEMENT SYSTEM: JOURNEYS FOR THE 21ST
CENTURY 437, 437–39 (Jean E. Kalicki & Anna Joubin-Bret eds., 2015). The genesis of this
focus could, in part, be the result of the United States’ commitment in many of its more
recent bilateral free trade agreements, see, e.g., United States-Korea Free Trade Agreement,
June 30, 2007, 46 I.L.M. 642, to eventually negotiate a formal appellate mechanism in the
investor dispute realm.
47. Theodore R. Posner, Partner, Weil, Gotshal & Manges LLP, Trading Views: Real
Debates on Key Issues in TPP—The Investment Chapter, Address Before the House Ways
and Means Committee 6 (Dec. 2, 2015), http://democrats.waysandmeans.house.gov/sites/
democrats.waysandmeans.house.gov/files/documents/POSNER%20Remarks%20for%20TP
P%20Investment%20Forum--12022015.pdf.
48. IP/15/5651, supra note 7.
49. Id.
50. See Marrakesh Agreement Establishing the World Trade Organization, Annex 2,
Apr. 15, 1994, 108 Stat. 4809, 1869 U.N.T.S. 401 [hereinafter DSU].
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resolution whereby parties progress through a series of increasingly formalized adjudicative proceedings. To begin, parties must “as far as possible” seek out an “amicable resolution” through negotiations or mediation.
51 If an amicable resolution cannot be reached, claim-
ants can then “submit a request for consultations” to the respondent.52
Such a request must include certain relevant information regarding the dispute, must be presented within a two- to three-year statute of limitations (depending on the circumstances of the claim), and the requested consultations must occur within sixty days of the request.
53
If after six months the dispute remains unresolved, the claimant may then formally submit their claim to one of the most notable innova-tions of the Commission’s ICS: the Tribunal of First Instance (“Tri-bunal”).
54
The Tribunal is designed to operate as a permanent TTIP-centric investment court, and will be imbued with the power to hear all claims submitted pursuant to TTIP’s dispute settlement provi-sions.
55 It will be comprised of fifteen judges, appointed by an as-
yet-unnamed “Committee” for a maximum of two six-year terms and paid a monthly retainer fee plus a set wage for each day worked.
56
Five of the Tribunal judges must be Americans, five must be Europe-ans, and five must be from third countries, and all must “possess the qualifications required in their respective countries for appointment to judicial office, or be jurists of recognised competence.”
57 The Tri-
bunal will hear cases “in divisions consisting of three Judges” to be randomly appointed by the President of the Tribunal, one each from the United States, the EU, and a third country.
58
Perhaps surprisingly, the proposed ICS would allow disputing parties to continue utilizing some of the procedures established by its predecessor, ISDS. Most notably, the text of the proposal allows claimants to submit claims to the Tribunal under one of several sets of existing dispute settlement rules, including the Convention on the
51. Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership: Trade in Services, Investment
and E-Commerce: Chapter II—Investment, EUROPEAN COMM’N 12 (Nov. 12, 2015)
[hereinafter Proposal], http://trade.ec.europa.eu/doclib/docs/2015/november/tradoc_153955
.pdf.
52. Id. at 13.
53. Id. at 13–14.
54. Id. at 15, 17–19.
55. Id. at 17.
56. Id. at 17–18.
57. Id. at 17.
58. Id. at 17–18.
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Settlement of Investment Disputes (the governing rules of the Inter-national Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (“ICSID”)), the arbitration rules of the United Nations Commission on Interna-tional Trade Law (“UNCITRAL”), or “any other rules agreed [to] by the disputing parties.”
59 Should the Tribunal determine in accord-
ance with those rules that a State has breached its obligations under TTIP, it will then have the power to issue “provisional awards” to claimants in the form of restitution of property, monetary damages (not to be “greater than the loss suffered by the claimant”) or a com-bination of the two.
60 The Tribunal may not, however, issue punitive
damages nor “order the repeal, cessation or modification of the treatment concerned.”
61
Within ninety days of the issuance of a provisional award, ei-ther of the two disputing parties may appeal the Tribunal’s decision to another of the Investment Court System’s most important innova-tions: the Appeal Tribunal.
62 The Appeal Tribunal will consist of
only six judges, but much like those in the Tribunal of First Instance, appellate-level judges will be appointed for a maximum of two six-year terms, will hear cases in similarly devised three-judge divisions, and will be paid a retainer in addition to a set wage for days worked.
63 Decisions of the Tribunal may only be modified or re-
versed by the Appeal Tribunal (i.e. there is no remand system), and modification or reversal will occur only if the Tribunal (1) “erred in the interpretation or application of the applicable law”; (2) “manifest-ly erred in the appreciation of facts” and/or relevant domestic legal standards; or (3) violated one of the many procedural grounds for ap-peal mentioned in Article 52 of the ICSID Convention.
64
Article 30 of the Commission’s proposal stipulates that any awards issued by either the Tribunal or the Appeal Tribunal “shall be
59. Id. at 15.
60. Id. at 29–30.
61. Id. at 30.
62. Id. at 31.
63. Id. at 19–20.
64. Id. at 31. Article 52 states, in relevant part, that either party to a dispute:
may request annulment of the award . . . on one or more of the following grounds: (a) that the Tribunal was not properly constituted; (b) that the Tribunal has manifestly exceeded its powers; (c) that there was corruption on the part of a member of the Tribunal; (d) that there has been a serious departure from a fundamental rule of procedure; or (e) that the award has failed to state the reasons on which it is based.
Convention on the Settlement of Investment Disputes between States and Nationals of Other
States art. 52, Mar. 18, 1965, 17 U.S.T. 1270, 575 U.N.T.S. 159 [hereinafter ICSID
Convention].
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binding between the disputing parties and shall not be subject to ap-peal, review, set aside, annulment or any other remedy.”
65 In other
words, any decisions handed down by either tribunal are considered final—the draft text provides no provision for further adjudication or appeal. Paragraph 2 of Article 30 indicates that Investment Court de-cisions must be treated by the EU and United States as if they “were a final judgement of a [domestic] court” within their territories.
66 By
requiring American and European courts to formally recognize ICS’s judgments, the language of the proposal could even suggest that fail-ure to comply with an Investment Court decision would open up dis-puting parties to sanctions similar to those already provided for in EU and U.S. domestic law.
D. The ICS’s Other Notable Innovations
Outside the tribunals themselves, the Commission’s Invest-ment Court System proposes several other innovations worth noting. First, Article 3 of the draft proposal provides for a voluntary media-tion process, which seems modeled after Article 5 of the WTO’s Dis-pute Settlement Understanding (“DSU”).
67 It would allow disputing
parties “at any time . . . to have recourse to mediation” so long as (1) they mutually agree to do so and (2) the mediation would not “preju-dice the legal position of either party.”
68
Second, the most recent draft of the Commission’s proposal includes a few important exemptions and special considerations for small and medium enterprises (“SMEs”).
69 For example, the pro-
posal includes a provision “particularly” geared towards SMEs that allows for formal consultations with a respondent state to take place by “videoconference or other means.”
70 In addition, the proposed
language would place limits on the “costs of legal representation and assistance [that may] be borne by an unsuccessful [SME] party,” in an apparent attempt at ensuring that SMEs can access the dispute set-
65. Proposal, supra note 51, at 31.
66. Id. at 32.
67. Compare id. at 12–13, with DSU, supra note 50, at 413–15.
68. Proposal, supra note 51, at 12.
69. European Commission Fact Sheet MEMO/15/6060, Why the New EU Proposal for
an Investment Court System in TTIP is Beneficial to Both States and Investors (Nov. 12,
2015) [hereinafter European Commission Fact Sheet], http://europa.eu/rapid/press-
release_MEMO-15-6060_en.htm.
70. Proposal, supra note 51, at 13.
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tlement system despite a relative lack of financial clout.71
Third, Article 2 of the proposal’s second section, which deals with investment protection, notes that nothing within the agreement shall “affect the right of the [EU or United States] to regulate within their territories through measures necessary to achieve legitimate pol-icy objectives.”
72 Therefore, consenting to the Commission’s pro-
posal will not prevent either the EU or U.S. governments from enact-ing policies related to “the protection of public health, safety, environment or public morals, social or consumer protection or pro-motion and protection of cultural diversity.”
73 The proposal, as a re-
sult, effectively enshrines the EU and United States’ “right . . . to regulate” within their own territories.
74
Finally, the Commission’s proposal adopts the UNCITRAL Rules on Transparency in Treaty-based Investor-State Arbitration, which would require that all Investment Court hearings be made pub-lic and that all information, documentation, and exhibits relevant to an Investment Court proceeding be published within a publicly-accessible repository.
75 Although in certain circumstances parties
can avoid publication,76
the Tribunal would have full discretion to determine whether such an exception should apply.
77
II. THE ICS—A NEW (AND IMPROVED?) PARADIGM FOR INVESTOR-STATE ADJUDICATION
Evaluating the ICS as a successor to ISDS requires a two-pronged analysis. First, one must assess the extent to which the ICS responds to each of the critiques lodged against ISDS, discussed above in Part I.B. These can be categorized as concerns over: (1) the inconsistency and unpredictability of arbitrator decision-making; (2) ISDS’s lack of transparency; (3) a lack of independence and impar-
71. Id. at 30.
72. Id. at 3.
73. Id.
74. European Commission Fact Sheet, supra note 69.
75. See Proposal, supra note 51, at 25; U.N. Comm’n on Int’l Trade Law, UNCITRAL
Rules on Transparency in Treaty-based Investor-State Arbitration (Jan. 2014) [hereinafter
UNCITRAL Rules on Transparency], http://www.uncitral.org/pdf/english/texts/arbitration/
rules-on-transparency/Rules-on-Transparency-E.pdf, as adopted by G.A. Res. 68/109 (Dec.
16, 2013).
76. For example, when the proceedings involve confidential, proprietary, or protected
information.
77. Proposal, supra note 51, at 29.
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194 COLUMBIA JOURNAL OF TRANSNATIONAL LAW [55:178
tiality amongst ISDS arbitrators; (4) the high costs associated with an elite arbitration industry; (5) the improper allocation of power and re-straints on state sovereignty that result from ISDS (including its chilling effect on state regulatory powers); (6) the “Trojan Horse” complaint—that ISDS enables foreign MNEs to challenge any public health, environmental, and social protections that cut into their profit margins; and (7) ISDS’s lack of a formal appeals process. Second, one must, to the extent possible, anticipate other complications the Investment Court might yield, and weigh those risks against the ben-efits it could confer.
A. The ICS as a Response to ISDS’s Critiques
1. Consistency and Predictability
The proposed Investment Court System would likely prove more consistent and predictable than ISDS’s ad hoc system of arbi-trator decision-making. Indeed, the Commission seems to have had consistency in mind when designing the ICS model, which introduces two permanent tribunals comprised of a set list of semi-permanent adjudicators of “recognised competence.”
78 By requiring that the
same basic group of jurists decide every TTIP-related investor-state dispute, the Commission’s proposal lays the stage for the ICS tribu-nals to become “authoritative bod[ies] capable of delivering con-sistent—and balanced—opinions.”
79
That said, commentators concerned about consistency may take issue with the proposal’s lack of either an explicit or implicit commitment to a precedent doctrine. Much like the WTO’s DSU, the Commission’s proposal does not stipulate that either the Tribunal or Appeal Tribunal should or must follow prior precedent. There-fore, the judges assigned to a given case would not be required to de-fer to past decisions in any way—even if they themselves took part in the prior adjudication. And if one of the ICS’s main goals is to in-crease the predictability of investor-state adjudications, why not modify the Commission’s proposal to adopt a rule of precedent?
Notably, such criticism would run counter to what has been the prevailing practice in international law since the 1922 adoption of the Statute of the Permanent Court of International Justice, which originally excluded stare decisis.
80 In fact, though international tri-
78. Id. at 12.
79. Reform of ISDS, supra note 16, at 8.
80. Gilbert Guillaume, The Use of Precedent by International Judges and Arbitrators,
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bunals routinely base their decisions on prior precedent, “all the in-ternational jurisdictions distance themselves in principle from the rule of stare decisis” in order to remain flexible both legally and po-litically.
81 In the TTIP context, for example, the EU and United
States would likely balk at ratifying any agreement that would effec-tively place the approximately €1.99 trillion of EU outward foreign direct investment (“FDI”) stocks in the United States and the approx-imately €1.81 trillion of U.S. outward FDI stocks in the EU at the mercy of a single (possibly under-qualified)
82 group of jurists.
83
Nonetheless, the challenges associated with the use of prece-dent in international law—namely navigating between the risks of “jurisprudential incoherence,” on the one hand, and “government by judges,” on the other
84—may mean that the ICS introduces less con-
sistency than the Commission hopes. They may even explain the im-petus for ISDS’s ad hoc approach—diversifying the responsibility of finding acceptable arbitrators allows the parties to the dispute (i.e. those with the greatest stake in the settlement proceedings) to deter-mine the adjudicatory circumstances that best suit their particular needs. But even taking those difficulties into consideration, there is good reason to believe that, by keeping the judges adjudicating dis-putes relatively static through time, the ICS would introduce a greater degree of consistency and predictability than ISDS currently affords.
2. Transparency
If implemented, the ICS would also heighten the level of transparency within investor-state dispute resolution. By incorporat-ing the UNCITRAL Rules on Transparency into its proposal, rules that the General Assembly of the UN formally adopted through a De-cember 2014 Resolution,
85 the Commission has ensured that the
2 J. INT’L DISP. SETTLEMENT 5, 8 (2011).
81. Id. at 14.
82. See infra Part II.B.1.
83. Foreign Direct Investment Statistics, EUROSTAT: STATISTICS EXPLAINED, tbl.2
(Sept. 16, 2016, 8:37 AM), http://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/statistics-explained/index.php/
Foreign_direct_investment_statistics. It should be noted that all macro-level financial
statistics cited both here and throughout the remainder of this Note reflect data compiled
prior to the United Kingdom’s June 23, 2016 vote in favor of exiting the European Union.
Considering the U.K. makes up approximately 10% of the EU’s GDP, “Brexit” could
substantially alter these estimates. However, because the impact of Brexit on TTIP had not
been determined as of this writing, the old, U.K.-inclusive figures have been retained.
84. Guillaume, supra note 80, at 5.
85. G.A. Res. 69/116, art. 2 (Dec. 10, 2014).
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ICS’s transparency provisions would include the most state-of-the-art regulatory model available. The UNCITRAL Rules were negotiated over the course of three years by expert delegations representing more than fifty UN Member States, and are specifically designed for use in connection with investor-state arbitrations.
86 Therefore, as-
suming all parties agree as to the benefits of transparency in investor-state disputes,
87 the UNCITRAL Rules represent the most practicable
system available.
3. Impartiality and Independence
As to impartiality and independence, the ICS intends to shore up ISDS’s weaknesses through the operation of its permanent dual-tribunal structure. By utilizing an objective rotation system for as-signing judges to cases, providing for increased transparency in ICS proceedings, and establishing an appellate body to review and ratify tribunal decision-making, the ICS takes several positive steps to-wards achieving adjudicative independence and impartiality.
88 Addi-
tionally, ICS judges cannot hear cases involving parties with whom they have a prior relationship, cannot act as counsel in any “pending or new investment protection dispute,” and cannot adjudicate any disputes “that would create a direct or indirect conflict of interest.”
89
86. LISE JOHNSON & NATHALIE BERNASCONI-OSTERWALDER, NEW UNCITRAL
ARBITRATION RULES ON TRANSPARENCY: APPLICATION, CONTENT AND NEXT STEPS 11 (Aug.
2013), http://www.ciel.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/06/UNCITRAL_Transparency_Aug
2013.pdf.
87. Of course, some investors might not be pleased with increases in transparency,
preferring to settle their affairs in private in order to avoid public backlash or the unwanted
dissemination of confidential or sensitive business information. However, their concerns
could be partly assuaged by Article 7 of the UNCITRAL Rules, which wisely exempts from
disclosure four broadly defined categories of confidential and/or protected data (including
proprietary business information). In applying Article 7, the ICS Tribunals could also look
for inspiration to the WTO regime, which has been applying confidentiality provisions in
similar dispute settlement proceedings for well over two decades. See, e.g., Appellate Body
Report, United States—Measures Affecting Trade in Large Civil Aircraft—Second
Complaint, WTO Doc. WT/DS353/AB/R (adopted Mar. 23, 2012); Appellate Body Report,
European Communities and Certain Member States—Measures Affecting Trade in Large
Civil Aircraft, WTO Doc. WT/DS316/AB/R (adopted June 1, 2011); Appellate Body Report,
Brazil—Export Financing Programme for Aircraft, WTO Doc. WT/DS46/AB/R (adopted
Aug. 20, 1999).
88. For a compelling discussion of the importance of independence and impartiality
within the adjudication process, as well as the dangers associated with dual arbitrator-
counsel relationships, see BERNASCONI-OSTERWALDER ET AL., supra note 33.
89. Proposal, supra note 51, at 20.
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Arguably the most important of the above innovations is the appellate review system, which some commentators believe will singlehanded-ly “make the international investment regime more democratic,” thereby ensuring “more independence and impartiality compared to the present arbitral system.”
90
On the other hand, critics have argued that ISDS’s appoint-ment mechanism already provides adequate safeguards against parti-san decision-making,
91 even implying that implementing the ICS
could actually increase the risk of biased adjudications.92
Moreover, because ISDS arbitrators typically must be approved by both parties to a dispute,
93 one could argue that any blame for a faulty arbitrator
lies with the parties themselves. However, such arguments do noth-ing to question the ICS’s structure and potential for impartiality—they instead focus on defending the existing ISDS system. There-fore, this Note will accept as given that, by imposing the measures noted above, ICS judges would be at least as independent and impar-tial as ISDS’s adjudicators, and possibly more so.
4. Costs of Adjudication
One of the most contentious issues surrounding the proposed Investment Court System—and arguably that for which the least em-pirical evidence exists—is whether it will reduce the costs of adjudi-cating investor-state disputes. In a memo released November 11, 2015, the Commission claims that the ICS would provide a “more cost effective and faster investment dispute resolution system” than the existing ISDS network.
94 According to that document, the ICS’s
“clear procedural deadlines” and “substantive rules,” which would ostensibly limit the duration of all proceedings (including appellate reviews) to two years, will “help to keep the claims—and thus the ex-
90. STEPHAN W. SCHILL, REFORMING INVESTOR-STATE DISPUTE SETTLEMENT (ISDS):
CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK AND OPTIONS FOR THE WAY FORWARD 8 (July 2015), http://
e15initiative.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/E15-Investment-Schill-FINAL.pdf.
91. EUROPEAN FED’N FOR INV. LAW & ARBITRATION, A RESPONSE TO THE CRITICISM
AGAINST ISDS 8–9 (May 17, 2015), http://efila.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/EFILA_
in_response_to_the-criticism_of_ISDS_final_draft.pdf.
92. See infra Part II.B.2.
93. Or, at the very least, the appointment of an arbitrator by one party must be offset by
allowing the opposing party an appointment of their own. Most ICSID arbitration panels,
for example, consist of one arbitrator appointed by the state, one appointed by the investor,
and a third appointed by agreement of both parties. ICSID Convention, supra note 64, art.
37.
94. European Commission Fact Sheet, supra note 69.
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198 COLUMBIA JOURNAL OF TRANSNATIONAL LAW [55:178
tent of litigation—in check.”95
By way of comparison, the Commis-sion estimates that ISDS arbitrations “often” last from five to six years, and that “many” take even longer.
96 Moreover, the Commis-
sion also asserts that, by apportioning exclusive control over ICS ad-judicators’ salaries to the EU and United States, the ICS would set “a cap on daily fees for judges.”
97 Such a cap would keep the level of
administrative costs low while preventing corrupt arbitrators from re-questing incommensurate fees in exchange for preferential services or treatment. Although such caps already exist within certain ISDS regulatory frameworks,
98 other rules’ structures allow arbitrators and
outside counsel to be paid according to ad hoc fee structures agreed upon privately by the parties to the dispute.
99
Nonetheless, some commentators have challenged the Com-mission’s claims.
100 Professor Jörg Risse argues that, unlike the ICS,
the ISDS system’s “ad hoc arbitrations [entail] virtually no or very little overhead costs.”
101 He analogizes the proposed ICS to ITLOS,
which handles fewer than 1.5 cases per year despite its €18.8 million annual operating budget.
102 Absent certain protective measures,
95. Id.
96. Id.
97. Id.
98. The ICSID framework for dispute settlement proceedings, for example, caps
arbitrators’ fee schedules at $3000 per day plus expenses. Matthew Hodgson, Counting the
Costs of Investment Treaty Arbitration, GLOBAL ARB. REV. (Mar. 24, 2014), http://
globalarbitrationreview.com/news/article/32513. This cap was instituted in 2006 amid
widespread reports of corrupt arbitrators requesting remuneration beyond that which was
stipulated in initial settlement discussions. Gary Born et al., Investment Treaty Arbitration:
ICSID Amends Investor-State Arbitration Rules, WILMERHALE (April 2006), https://www.
wilmerhale.com/pages/publicationsandnewsdetail.aspx?NewsPubId=90393.
99. The UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules, along with a few other, less heavily utilized
frameworks, set “no institutional limits akin to those at ICSID,” instead allowing parties to
determine appropriate levels of arbitrator compensation. David Gaukrodger & Kathryn
Gordon, Investor-State Dispute Settlement: A Scoping Paper for the Investment Policy
Community 20 n.27 (OECD Working Papers on Int’l Inv., Paper No. 2012/03, 2012),
http://www.oecd.org/investment/investment-policy/WP-2012_3.pdf.
100. Granted, it is worth noting that the majority of the Commission’s critics on this
point are practicing attorneys with specialties in international arbitration—individuals whose
professional welfare could very well suffer should the Commission’s approach prove
successful. Both Risse and Hel-Koedoot, for example, are practicing attorneys in the
international arbitration practices of Baker & McKenzie and NautaDutilh, respectively.
101. Joerg Risse, A New “Investment Court System”—Reasonable Proposal or
Nonstarter?, GLOBAL ARB. NEWS (Sept. 25, 2015), http://globalarbitrationnews.com/
investment-court-system-20150925.
102. Id.
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Risse believes that a bilateral ICS between the EU and United States risks becoming as inefficient a body as ITLOS, especially given “how few investment arbitrations are actually pending where all par-ties involved stem from developed, industrialized countries with a sound democratic tradition.”
103 Still others claim that the existence
of an appellate tribunal will “lead to more delays and costs, as it is to be expected that the majority of the losing parties will use the oppor-tunity to appeal.”
104
Of course, there is no way to know ex ante whether the ICS will actually act as inefficiently as ITLOS, or whether the Appeal Tribunal will actually lead to delays despite the Commission’s strict procedural deadlines. However, the data available on ISDS
105 indi-
cate that the single largest cost component of the arbitration process (at an estimated 82% of all costs) is comprised of “the fees and ex-penses incurred by each party for its legal counsel and experts.”
106
And these fees are often nontrivial—between 2004 and 2014, the Philippines shelled out $58 million in order to successfully defend itself against Fraport, a German airport operator.
107 While there is no
reason to believe that either states or investors mired in an ICS dis-pute will compromise on the quality or expense of their legal counsel, standardizing and circumscribing the adjudicatory process could plausibly lead to fewer man-hours worked and, as a result, an overall reduction in legal fees.
108 Assuming, then, that the ICS will make the
103. Id.
104. Mirjam van de Hel-Koedoot, The Proposed New Investment Court System for
TTIP: The Right Way Forward?, EUR. FED’N FOR INV. L. & ARB. BLOG (Oct. 14, 2015),
http://efilablog.org/2015/10/14/the-proposed-new-investment-court-system-for-ttip-the-
right-way-forward.
105. Note that the privatized nature of the ISDS system implies that no public registry of
claims exists, and that all data is therefore approximated. For a more detailed explanation of
the data, see Roderick Abbott et al., Demystifying Investor-State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) 9
(European Ctr. for Int’l Political Econ., Occasional Paper No. 5/2014, 2014), http://www.
ecipe.org/app/uploads/2014/12/OCC52014__1.pdf.
106. Gaukrodger & Gordon, supra note 99, at 19.
107. PIA EBERHARDT & CECILIA OLIVET, PROFITING FROM INJUSTICE: HOW LAW FIRMS,
ARBITRATORS AND FINANCIERS ARE FUELLING AN INVESTMENT ARBITRATION BOOM 7 (Nov.
2012), https://corporateeurope.org/sites/default/files/publications/profiting-from-injustice.
pdf.
108. Although the use of non-hourly fee arrangements (e.g. contingency fees) by ISDS
practitioners seems to be on the rise, MAHNAZ MALIK, RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN
INTERNATIONAL INVESTMENT AGREEMENTS: NEGOTIATIONS AND DISPUTES 8 (Oct. 2010),
https://www.iisd.org/sites/default/files/meterial/dci_2010_recent_developments_iias.pdf
(prepared for the IV Annual Forum for Developing Country Investment Negotiators), that
practice remains the exception, not the rule. As defendants, state-parties to investor-state
disputes will never have access to contingency fee arrangements. And those private firms
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investor-state dispute resolution process more efficient and less tedi-ous, states (and especially their taxpayers) could realize enormous benefits.
5. Allocation of Power and State Sovereignty: The Trojan Horse Complaint
By limiting investors’ capacity to challenge state regulatory initiatives, the ICS would shift power from MNEs to the EU and United States, thereby protecting state sovereignty and eliminating the possibility of Trojan Horse lawsuits. According to some com-mentators, the “open and broad wording of the substantive provi-sions” of IIAs, together with the ad hoc nature of the ISDS system, currently allows tribunals to adopt overly broad interpretations of their subject matter jurisdiction in investment disputes.
109 As a re-
sult, investors are able to bring claims concerning not only “direct expropriation and open discrimination, but also [state] regulatory measures,” thereby discouraging states from adopting even legitimate policy regulations.
110 By contrast, the proposed ICS framework
clearly delineates the jurisdictional reach of its tribunals, and explicit-ly states that the sovereign nations subject to its purview will retain their ability to regulate in order to achieve “legitimate policy objec-tives.”
111 According to the Commission, this strategy represents a
major improvement whereby “governments’ right to regulate would be enshrined and guaranteed.”
112 Therefore, even if the regulatory
chill theory fails to conjure any reliable empirical support,113
sup-porters of the ICS can still claim that the system’s explicit regulatory protections lend more security to state regulatory powers than cur-rently offered by the loose network of IIAs that buttress ISDS.
The ICS’s regulatory safeguards also provide a neat answer to
offering investor-plaintiffs an "alternative" fee schedule often still charge a reduced hourly
rate. CATHERINE A. ROGERS & ROGER P. ALFORD, THE FUTURE OF INVESTMENT
ARBITRATION 310 (2009).
109. KRAJEWSKI, supra note 36, at 7.
110. Id.
111. Proposal, supra note 51, at 3.
112. IP/15/5651, supra note 7.
113. It is worth noting that the empirical evidence compiled to date is, at best, mixed.
While anecdotal support for the regulatory chill theory abounds, a formal study of NAFTA
and the Dominican Republic-Central America Free Trade Agreement, prepared by Christian
Tietje and Freya Baetens for the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs, found “no evidence that
any government has changed a policy position or refrained from acting in a policy area for
fear of potential ISDS claims.” TIETJE ET AL., supra note 30, at 93.
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the “Trojan Horse” argument, which maintains that ISDS enables foreign corporations to illicitly challenge public health, environmen-tal, and social regulatory protections.
114 By adopting the Uruguay
Round’s “legitimate policy objectives” language,115
the Commis-sion’s proposal formally recognizes the authority of states to regulate in order to protect “public health, safety, environment or public mor-als, social or consumer protection or promotion and protection of cul-tural diversity,” regardless of the repercussions those regulations might have on private investors.
116 This oft-cited list of “legitimate”
regulatory objectives is non-exhaustive, which could prove confusing if countries “formulate their own policy objectives and . . . tailor [their own] technical regulations accordingly.”
117 However, because
these policy exceptions have been (and continue to be) relatively well defined by international jurisprudence,
118 the list’s non-exhaustive
nature should not prevent investors from understanding the scope of valid sovereign regulatory power and ordering their behavior accord-ingly. As a result, the Commission seems justified in claiming that the ICS would provide an answer to the power allocation, state sov-
114. See supra Part I.B.2.
115. Proposal, supra note 51, at 3. The Uruguay Round of multilateral trade
negotiations, which took place from 1986 to 1994, led to the formal establishment of the
WTO. The phrase “legitimate policy objectives” appears in both the General Agreement on
Tariffs and Trade and the Agreement on Technical Barriers to Trade, which were
renegotiated by the Uruguay Round. The phrase has since become a well-recognized term
of art. See Thomas Friedheim, Domestic Taxes and Administrative and Technical Barriers
to Trade on Goods and Services, in IMPLICATIONS OF THE URUGUAY ROUND AGREEMENT FOR
SOUTH ASIA: THE CASE OF AGRICULTURE 87 (Benoit Blarel et al. eds., 1999).
116. Proposal, supra note 51, at 3.
117. Friedheim, supra note 115, at 96.
118. In the trade realm, for example, both the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
and the Agreement on Technical Barriers to Trade incorporate exceptions for legitimate
policy objectives, and the WTO dispute settlement body has litigated several cases
concerning the scope and definition of that language. See, e.g., Appellate Body Report,
Brazil—Measures Affecting Imports of Retreaded Tyres, ¶¶ 213–34, WTO Doc.
WT/DS332/AB/R (adopted Dec. 17, 2007) Appellate Body Report, European
Communities—Measures Affecting Asbestos and Asbestos-Containing Products, ¶¶ 41–44,
182–85, WTO Doc. WT/DS135/AB/R (adopted Apr. 5, 2001); Appellate Body Report,
United States—Import Prohibition of Certain Shrimp and Shrimp Products, ¶¶ 183–186,
WTO Doc. WT/DS58/AB/R (adopted Nov. 6, 1998); Appellate Body Report, United
States—Standards for Reformulated and Conventional Gasoline, at 17–19, 25–29, WTO
Doc. WT/DS2/AB/R (adopted May 20, 1996). Similar language has also been incorporated
into several other bilateral trade and investment agreements, including CETA.
Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement, Can.-European Union, art. 8.9, Feb. 29,
2016, EUR. COMMISSION, http://trade.ec.europa.eu/doclib/docs/2016/february/tradoc_
154329.pdf (signed by all parties but not yet in force).
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ereignty, and Trojan Horse critiques lodged against ISDS.
6. A Formal Appellate Mechanism
The ICS’s Appeal Tribunal has been discussed at some length in the preceding sections,
119 and its inclusion within the Commis-
sion’s proposal provides a clear answer to one of the longest-standing critiques of ISDS. Namely, that without a formal appellate body within the investor-state context there exists no independent mecha-nism to “allow errors of law to be corrected”
120 or to act “as a check
on the ISDS process.”121
Indeed, calls for an ISDS-centric appellate mechanism have riddled scholarly and political commentaries for over a decade; the United States even allowed for the possibility of establishing such an entity in its 2004 Model BIT.
122 However, most
such commentaries envisioned an independent appellate mechanism of international scope, possibly modeled after the WTO’s Appellate Body.
123 By contrast, the ICS would, by definition, apply only to
TTIP-centric disputes. Instead of providing a solution to ISDS’s ten-dency to beget “diametrically opposed interpretations of the same or very similar investment agreements,”
124 then, the TTIP-specific ICS
might actually contribute to the same alleged inconsistences.125
This problem would only be compounded if the Commission chooses to
119. See supra Parts II.A.1, II.A.4.
120. Glyn Moody, EU Puts Fresh Coat of Paint on ISDS, Now Re-Branded as
“Investment Court System”, ARS TECHNICA UK, (Sept. 16, 2015, 9:30 AM), http://
arstechnica.co.uk/tech-policy/2015/09/eu-puts-fresh-coat-of-paint-on-isds-now-re-branded-
as-investment-court-system.
121. SAPIRO, supra note 13, at 13.
122. Treaty Between the Government of the United States of America and the
Government of [Country] Concerning the Encouragement and Reciprocal Protection of
Investment, U.S. DEPT. OF STATE (2004), http://www.state.gov/documents/organization/
117601.pdf (model bilateral investment treaty). In 2012, the U.S. State Department released
an updated and reformed Model BIT, but retained those provisions relating to a multilateral
ISDS appellate mechanism. Treaty Between the Government of the United States of
America and the Government of [Country] Concerning the Encouragement and Reciprocal
Protection of Investment, U.S. DEPT. OF STATE (2012) [hereinafter 2012 Model BIT],
https://ustr.gov/sites/default/files/BIT%20text%20for%20ACIEP%20Meeting.pdf (model
bilateral investment treaty).
123. KRAJEWSKI, supra note 36, at 20.
124. Id.
125. Of course, the Commission’s press releases indicate that the ICS is intended only to
fulfill a sort of stopgap role—providing an example of what a full-fledged international
investment court might look like until one can be established. Should such a global entity
eventually emerge, it would assuage these inconsistency concerns. See infra Part II.B.3.
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ratify multiple ICS-incorporating IIAs, as seems more than likely given its current approach to the CETA and TTIP Agreements.
126
B. Other Complications Inherent in the ICS Model
1. Attracting Qualified Jurists
From a purely logistical standpoint, it remains to be seen whether the ICS will be able to attract a suitable number of qualified candidates to fill all its posts. American negotiators, for example, may have a difficult time identifying and securing commitments from eight jurists that have an in-depth understanding of international in-vestment law, possess the qualifications for appointment to, in the case of Appeal Tribunal judges, the highest of the United States’ ju-dicial offices (presumably a Federal District Court, Federal Circuit Court of Appeals, or the Supreme Court), and prove willing to forego the heightened prestige (and remuneration) of such a position in favor of an appointment to the ICS.
127 Appointing underqualified judges
would not affect the predictability or impartiality problems discussed in Part II.A, above, but it could undermine the court’s effectiveness and legitimacy. Should investors come to feel their claims will get a better hearing in better-staffed domestic courts, they might even abandon the ICS entirely.
2. The Risk of Capture
By calling for ICS’s judges to be appointed and reappointed by a single, as-yet-undefined “Committee,”
128 the Commission’s
proposal would arguably motivate ICS’s jurists to base their judicial findings on factors other than strict issues of law or fact. After all, judges that are up for reappointment will have an incentive to act in accordance with that Committee’s expectations in order to secure their employment position. And because states are ultimately re-sponsible for negotiating the contours of the ICS, there is a danger
126. See IP/16/399, supra note 28.
127. Although the Proposal does not specifically prohibit U.S. federal court judges from
sitting on the Appeal Tribunal, Section 3, Article 10(11) stipulates that “[a]ll persons serving
on the Appeal Tribunal shall be available at all times and on short notice and shall stay
abreast of other dispute settlement activities under this agreement.” Proposal, supra note 51,
at 20. Given the time constraints faced by U.S. federal judges in the performance of their
domestic duties, it therefore seems unlikely that a single individual could effectively juggle
both appointments.
128. Proposal, supra note 51, at 17.
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that the Committee and, as a result, the tribunals themselves would be “captured” by state interests, to the detriment of investor-complainants. It is of course possible that the Committee will be or-ganized in a way to safeguard its appointment decisions against the risk of capture.
129 However, the high stakes faced by sovereign na-
tions mired in investor-state disputes130
imply that there would be, at the very least, some motivation for states to attempt to unduly influ-ence the Committee’s work.
Of course, critics could analogize to the EU and U.S. domes-tic court systems, whose judges are appointed through a variety of different mechanisms and who are routinely tasked with resolving state-interested disputes, to argue that the ICS’s judges would like-wise be capable of adjudicating similar cases without succumbing to the risks of capture. In the United States, for example, of the 281,608 civil cases filed in U.S. district courts in 2015, 37,349 (approximately thirteen percent) named the United States as a defendant.
131 And
while some critics have raised concerns about the independence of American judges,
132 their decisions, including in cases against their
own government, have been touted as some of the most reliable in the world.
133
However, the domestic and ICS contexts can be distinguished on several important grounds. First, approximately two-thirds of in-vestor-state disputes arise as a result of a host country’s decision not to honor the terms of an explicit contractual agreement between it and the complaining investor.
134 States can therefore anticipate most
129. For example, the Committee would ideally be comprised of knowledgeable, yet
unbiased and disinterested, representatives from both the EU and the United States and could
include a safeguard mechanism whereby its appointment decisions must be ratified by both
parties to TTIP. The ratification process could also solicit input from private investors, for
instance, by initiating a notice-and-comment period (not unlike that which exists in
American administrative law).
130. See supra notes 82–83 and accompanying text.
131. U.S. COURTS, FEDERAL JUDICIAL CASELOAD STATISTICS 2015 (2015).
132. See, e.g., Mira Gur-Arie & Russell Wheeler, Judicial Independence in the United
States: Current Issues and Relevant Background Information, in GUIDANCE FOR PROMOTING
JUDICIAL INDEPENDENCE AND IMPARTIALITY 133 (2002), http://pdf.usaid.gov/pdf_docs/
pnacm007.pdf.
133. For example, the 2016 World Justice Project Rule of Law Index, a global rule-of-
law ratings mechanism that assesses judicial systems on a variety of factors—including
regulatory enforcement, absence of corruption, and civil and criminal justice—ranked the
United States courts eighteenth in the world. WORLD JUSTICE PROJECT, RULE OF LAW INDEX
2016 5 (2016), http://worldjusticeproject.org/sites/default/files/media/wjp_rule_of_law_
index_2016.pdf.
134. See GUS VAN HARTEN, SOVEREIGN CHOICES AND SOVEREIGN CONSTRAINTS:
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suits well in advance of their ultimate adjudication, and, if given power over the judicial process, would be in a unique position to im-properly direct their own legal liabilities. More worrisome, domestic court judges are responsible for resolving an enormous variety of cases, only a fraction of which involve civil suits against the govern-ment,
135 while the ICS’s judges would only resolve investor-state
disputes. Therefore, there is substantially less danger in the domestic context than the ICS context that judges would be selected solely based on their tendency to decide such disputes in favor of govern-ment interests. Finally, and most importantly, U.S. federal court judges enjoy lifetime tenure, presumably shielding them from gov-ernmental influence. First-term ICS judges, on the other hand, might be more susceptible to undue pressure from host countries if focused on securing a second term.
In order to counter the potential risk of capture arising from the ICS’s judicial appointment committee, TTIP’s negotiators could instead adopt an appointment process similar to that of the ICC, which allows member-countries to democratically elect candidates that meet certain base-level criteria.
136 However, there are three pri-
mary issues with modeling an appointment process after the ICC. First, holding a “popular vote” between the two parties to a bilateral agreement hardly feels democratic. Both the EU and U.S. would likely propose candidates that they could compel to represent their own interests, and the lack of a consensus-capable voting body would raise the danger of a deadlocked selection process. Second, countries in the ICC context have less of a vested interest in the outcome of disputes—member states’ interests in fair and effective adjudication typically stem only from the desire that “the most serious crimes of concern to the international community . . . not go unpunished.”
137 In
investor-state disputes, on the other hand, state-defendants inherently have a fundamental economic interest in the adjudicative process, and therefore have more of an incentive to inject bias into the pro-ceedings. Third, in the ICC context states are the wronged party, whereas in the investor-state context it is just the opposite. In most cases, investor-state disputes arise after states have reneged on con-tracts with MNEs. It seems more likely, then, that states would resort to capture as a means for protecting their interests. For those reasons, affording states total control over any aspect of the investor-state dis-
JUDICIAL RESTRAINT IN INVESTMENT TREATY ARBITRATION 122–24 (2013).
135. U.S. COURTS, supra note 131.
136. Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court art. 36, July 17, 1998, 2187
U.N.T.S. 90 [hereinafter Rome Statute].
137. Id. at pmbl.
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pute settlement process (for example, by authorizing them to make judicial appointment decisions) might encourage them to organize the adjudicative proceedings in such a way as to benefit their own inter-ests, presumably at the expense of investors.
In fact, if one accepts the proposition that states have an in-centive to act self-interestedly in establishing the judge-selection Committee, many of the ICS’s ostensible solutions to ISDS’s prob-lems can be called into question. For example, calling a “captured” tribunal system “impartial” or “independent” would be disingenuous at best, as would claiming that its rulings are “consistent.” True, one might expect all of the ICS’s decisions to come out in favor of the states, but that hardly bespeaks an intellectually honest interpretation of the consistency called for by ISDS’s critics.
The issues of state sovereignty and power allocation also take on a sinister tone when accounting for the risk of capture. If the judi-cial selection committee is beholden to TTIP’s member countries, the EU and United States will have the power to pick and choose adjudi-cators based on their ideological outlook, and ICS’s judges will have a personal incentive to rule against investors. Such a massive shift in adjudicative power would undoubtedly throw the investor-state dis-pute resolution regime off-balance, and could undo whatever gains the states would realize from increased sovereignty protections. Surely the Commission cannot be faulted for attempting to protect EU and U.S. sovereign authority, but one should be wary of any measures which provide them—parties with foreseeable interests in prospective investor-state disputes—with an illicit advantage in fu-ture proceedings.
Finally, one could also challenge the assertion that including an appellate review structure necessarily leads to a more “democrat-ic” adjudicative process. After all, even if it is true that an appellate-level judicial review of the Tribunal’s decisions would provide a “check[] on the propriety of the [ICS’s] proceedings,”
138 that “check”
can only function if the appeal tribunal itself remains free from cap-ture.
Allowing countries to control judicial appointments would arguably be like formally enlisting the executive staff of Enron or Stratton Oakmont to draft applicable white-collar criminal statutes. In both cases, the offending party (i.e. the one accused of wrongdo-ing) is provided the opportunity to determine the circumstances under which their alleged misdeeds will be evaluated. Such a system not only smacks of impropriety, it is simply nonsensical. Worse, if in-
138. BERNASCONI-OSTERWALDER ET AL., supra note 33, at 2.
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vestors begin to realize a negative financial impact as a result of such a system, the increased costs of researching and executing potential FDI opportunities could prohibit otherwise beneficial international investments from taking place, resulting in deadweight loss.
3. Extrapolation to an International Investment Court
Finally, one cannot fully evaluate the ICS without first con-sidering the broader significance contemplated by the Commission’s proposal: namely, a strategic pivot away from the existing ad hoc dispute settlement system in favor of a permanent international in-vestment court. In both its September and November 2015 press re-leases introducing its plans for the ICS, the Commission explicitly stated that it ultimately envisioned establishing an international in-vestment court to replace all other investor-state dispute resolution mechanisms, including the ICS.
139 The specific contours of this in-
ternational court system are as yet unknown—the November press release indicates only that the Commission is “currently exchanging views with several international organisations” and “other countries” regarding it.
140 But while the Commission anticipates that brain-
storming process to operate “in parallel to the TTIP negotiations,” it would be difficult to imagine an eventual worldwide investment court system that did not incorporate most (if not all) of the major tenets of the ICS.
141
Therefore, evaluating the ICS solely in terms of its potential impact on EU-U.S. investment relations yields an incomplete picture of the proposal’s scope. To understand the full potential of the Commission’s plan, one would need to examine the effect that an in-ternational investment court’s multilateral status and amplified juris-dictional purview might have on impartiality, costs of adjudication, and the other elements of the analytical framework applied above in Part II.A. A permanent international investment court would miti-gate some of the concerns noted above (for example, the present in-consistencies in the interpretation and application of similarly-worded IIAs), while potentially exacerbating others (for example, the independence and impartiality of investment dispute adjudicators). However, such an analysis lies outside the scope of this Note, both because it would require an unwholesome degree of conjecture (giv-en that no framework for an international investment court has as yet
139. IP/15/6059, supra note 8; IP/15/5651, supra note 7.
140. IP/15/6059, supra note 8.
141. IP/15/5651, supra note 7.
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been put forward) and because this Note’s focus remains on analyz-ing TTIP, ISDS, and the ICS.
C. An Imperfect Solution
Based on the foregoing analysis, the Commission’s proposed Investment Court System seems to be a bit of a mixed bag. On the one hand, the ICS will improve upon the existing investor-state dis-pute resolution system by ushering in: (1) increased transparency and consistency in the adjudication of disputes; (2) possible reduc-tions in legal fees/overall costs; (3) additional protections for state regulatory powers; and (4) an established appellate mechanism. But on the other, the ICS would introduce significant logistical problems (for example, in hiring and retaining adequately qualified judges, de-termining whether and how precedential case law should apply to the adjudication of future disputes, etc.) and, most importantly, would seem poised to reallocate the power to appoint adjudicators, a power which investors and sovereigns share under the current ISDS system, solely to states.
III. ALTERNATIVE SOLUTIONS TO ISDS’S CRITIQUES
The ICS’s mixed report card raises the question—are there any alternative solutions more capable than the proposed Investment Court of addressing the critiques lodged against ISDS? This Note will consider three such alternatives: (1) the so-called “Osgoode Plan,”
142 which advocates returning to the pre-ISDS system and re-
placing investor-state arbitrations with domestic court adjudication and private ordering opportunities;
143 (2) an international ratings
mechanism that would require investors to file disputes based on a third-party evaluation of the host country’s regulatory standards and rule-of-law;
144 and (3) a reformed and updated version of the existing
ISDS framework. These alternatives were chosen because, first, they are representative of the few solutions that have been offered to-date
142. Public Statement on the International Investment Regime, OSGOODE HALL L. SCH.
(Aug. 31, 2010), http://www.osgoode.yorku.ca/public-statement-international-investment-
regime-31-august-2010.
143. For example, investment risk insurance, contract-based arbitration, etc.
144. John P. Gaffney, When Is Investor-State Dispute Settlement Appropriate to Resolve
Investment Disputes? An Idea for a Rule-of-Law Ratings Mechanism, COLUMBIA FDI
PERSPECTIVES, June 8, 2015, http://ccsi.columbia.edu/files/2013/10/No-149-Gaffney-FINAL.
pdf.
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in response to ISDS, implying that they present the most politically and logistically viable options available, and second, their basic con-tours can be mapped and properly evaluated.
145
A. The Osgoode Plan
In a now somewhat outdated public statement, a group of more than fifty professors and academics (“the Osgoode Group”) led by Gus Van Harten, an outspoken professor and scholar of invest-ment treaty arbitration at Osgoode Hall Law School, decried the then-current international investment regime for “hampering . . . the ability of governments to act for their people in response to the con-cerns of human development and environmental sustainability.”
146
Their 2010 statement echoes many of the concerns inherent in the Trojan Horse complaint,
147 including that “investment arbitration
poses a serious threat to democratic choice and the capacity of gov-ernments to act in the public interest by way of innovative policy-making in response to changing social, economic, and environmental conditions.”
148 As a result, the group recommends that sovereign na-
tions review their existing IIAs with a view to renouncing or renego-tiating their terms, while “strengthen[ing] their domestic justice sys-tem[s]” and in general “replac[ing] or curtail[ing] the use of investment treaty arbitration.”
149 Additionally, it calls on interna-
tional organizations to research and recommend alternatives to ISDS, “including private risk insurance and contract-based arbitration.”
150
Effectively, the Osgoode Group’s proposal is the converse of the ICS. Where the European Commission’s recommendation calls for increased global coordination in adjudicating investor-state dis-putes, Osgoode proposes a greater emphasis on both private ordering and the settlement of disputes by domestic tribunals. Indeed, the Os-goode Group essentially advocates for a return to the international investment structures that predated ISDS. Within the context of the TTIP agreement, then, they would argue that domestic courts in the EU and United States should hold sole authority to adjudicate the es-
145. Hence the non-consideration of a multilateral investment court system. See supra
Part II.B.3.
146. Public Statement on the International Investment Regime, supra note 142.
147. See supra Part II.A.5.
148. Public Statement on the International Investment Regime, supra note 142.
149. Id.
150. Id.
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timated two-thirds151
of disputes between states and investors that in-volve a contractual breach, with the remainder to be resolved through private risk-insurers and other forms of private ordering (for exam-ple, social norms).
1. The Osgoode Plan as a Response to ISDS’s Critiques
Because the Osgoode Plan pivots towards domestic courts, assessing it as a TTIP-centric response to ISDS will depend primarily on the circumstances present in the EU and U.S. legal systems. Dis-pensing with the easiest factors first, the Osgoode Plan provides a so-lution of sorts to the question of appellate proceedings. Eliminating ISDS would necessarily obviate the need for an ISDS-related appel-late tribunal—investors mired in TTIP-related domestic court pro-ceedings could instead access the appellate procedures available un-der EU and/or U.S. law. Also, the Osgoode Plan entails a substantial shift in power from investors to states. Returning to the pre-ISDS era would leave wronged investors to resort to either domestic courts, over which host countries have exclusive control, or private recom-pensatory schemes, in which host countries would have no vested in-terest. Finally, the Osgoode Plan provides a succinct answer to the Trojan Horse complaint. If investors only had recourse to host coun-try courts, any disputes arising out of social or environmental policies would have to follow the procedures established within the country for challenging domestic regulatory policy, presumably without the possibility of corporate subterfuge.
Determining whether adjudication of investor-state disputes under the Osgoode Plan would be more consistent, predictable, and transparent, and whether domestic adjudicators would be more inde-pendent and impartial, requires a more nuanced analysis. The an-swers turn on whether the EU and U.S. legal systems can achieve more coherence, greater uniformity, and lower levels of corruption than ISDS offers. Given that both regions boast markedly sophisti-cated court systems,
152 an affirmative conclusion seems all but or-
dained. But consider that, under the ISDS regime, investors alleging government wrongdoing have the option to settle their disputes through either arbitration or domestic court proceedings, assuming the alleged misconduct gives rise to a cognizable claim within the host country’s legal system. Put differently, the Osgoode Plan does
151. VAN HARTEN, supra note 134.
152. See generally Dakolias, supra note 21; ELVIRE FABRY & GIORGIO GARBASSO,
“ISDS” IN THE TTIP: THE DEVIL IS IN THE DETAILS (2015), http://www.
institutdelors.eu/media/ttipisds-fabrygarbasso-nejdi-jan15.pdf.
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not offer investors any additional form of adjudication; it would simply force them down one of the two adjudicatory paths previously open to them. Assuming investors in the EU and United States prefer coherent and independent adjudicatory options, then, one would ex-pect that they already choose domestic court proceedings over ISDS arbitrations.
153 One could therefore infer that, at least within the
TTIP context, the Osgoode Plan will result in nothing more than a continuation of the status quo. Of course, without empirical data there is no way to be certain of the impact the Osgoode Plan would have on the factors identified. But, if nothing else, the foregoing analysis should cast doubt on the Osgoode Group’s logic in propos-ing a return to the pre-ISDS era.
Similarly, the Osgoode Plan’s net effect on TTIP-related ad-judication costs could depend on the idiosyncrasies of the EU and U.S. domestic legal systems. Although anecdotal evidence abounds of the high costs associated with ISDS arbitrations, choosing to liti-gate in the TTIP countries’ domestic courts might not, from a cost-savings perspective, prove a particularly welcome alternative. In the United States especially, commentators note that litigation costs have reached a “disproportionate” level compared to the rest of the world,
154 so much so that “[m]any foreign investors view the U.S. le-
153. Of course, one could plausibly counter that investors might actually prefer less
coherent forums for dispute resolution, should they perceive that such a venue would
provide them a better chance to obtain relief. However, what data is available on ISDS
indicates the contrary. In the United States, for example, “foreign investors rarely pursue
arbitration . . . and have never been successful when they have done so.” Fact Sheet, Office
of the U.S. Trade Representative, supra note 17. Despite annually accounting for between
fourteen to twenty-one percent of the world’s GDP PPP throughout the last few decades,
United States Share of World GDP based on PPP, %, QUANDL (Oct. 6, 2016),
https://www.quandl.com/data/ODA/USA_PPPSH, the United States has only been the
named respondent in sixteen of the more than 500 total reported ISDS cases. ISDS Fact
Sheet, TRANS ATL. BUS. COUNCIL (Jan. 2015), http://www.transatlanticbusiness.org/wp-
content/uploads/2014/05/ISDS-Fact-Sheet.pdf. The total number of ISDS cases brought
against EU Member States is significantly higher, but only twenty-four percent of those have
led to an award upholding claims. Id. More than half of the cases brought against EU
Member States in 2013 were against either Spain or the Czech Republic. U.N. Conference
on Trade & Development, World Investment Report 2014: Investing in the SDGs: An
Action Plan 125 (2014), http://unctad.org/en/PublicationsLibrary/wir2014_en.pdf. Based on
the evidence, one must conclude either that the TTIP Member States are generally less
violative of investor interests than other countries or that aggrieved investors choose to
pursue such disputes through alternative avenues.
154. See, e.g., LAWYERS FOR CIVIL JUSTICE ET AL., LITIGATION COST SURVEY OF MAJOR
COMPANIES 3 (2010), www.uscourts.gov/file/document/litigation-cost-survey-major-
companies (presented to the Committee on Rules of Practice and Procedure, Judicial
Conference of the United States, 2010 Conference on Civil Litigation at Duke Law School,
May 10–11, 2010).
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gal environment as a liability when investing in the United States.”155
That said, the Osgoode Group could argue that eliminating ISDS ar-bitrations in favor of domestic court proceedings would standardize the judicial process, and might thereby lead to an overall reduction in legal fees. Such an argument again assumes that investors in the EU and United States currently utilize ISDS to the exclusion of domestic courts, an assumption about which one can only speculate in the ab-sence of any hard data. But even assuming for the sake of argument that the Osgoode Group’s proposal would achieve a net decrease in the fees associated with adjudicating investor-state disputes, other problems inherent in the plan make it an unwelcome alternative to ISDS.
2. Other Complications Inherent in the Osgoode Plan
To understand the full scope of the Osgoode Plan’s potential impact on TTIP, one must also consider the initial impetus for the ISDS regime and the role it currently plays in international invest-ment. After all, a full repudiation of the ISDS system would by defi-nition eliminate all of its benefits. As stated above,
156 the purposes of
ISDS are to lower the transaction costs associated with investments, reduce investment risk, and make IIA commitments more enforcea-ble. Theoretically, these propositions seem reasonable, given the myriad legal contingencies foreign investors would otherwise have to consider before investing in a host country.
157 Granted, these contin-
gencies are likely to be trivial in the TTIP context, given the exten-sive investment history shared by the EU and United States. But there remains the possibility that the Osgoode Plan, by eliminating these beneficial aspects of ISDS, would impose additional structural costs on investors and/or discourage beneficial investments that oth-erwise would have occurred.
More worryingly, eliminating ISDS in favor of domestic courts and private ordering opportunities would undermine arguably the most important modern basis for international property rights. By offering a secure, sophisticated alternative to domestic courts, ISDS provides investors—even those that never institute an arbitral pro-ceeding—with the peace of mind that their property rights will be re-
155. INT’L TRADE ADMIN., ASSESSING TRENDS AND POLICIES OF FOREIGN DIRECT
INVESTMENT IN THE UNITED STATES 7 (July 2008), http://trade.gov/media/publications/pdf/
fdi2008.pdf.
156. See supra Part I.A.
157. For example, its unique procedural rules and statutory requirements or delays in the
administration of justice.
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spected, even in a foreign country. These rights form the foundation of our globalized economy, so much so that empirical studies have drawn links between the introduction of property rights in individual countries and “economic prosperity and freedom.”
158 Removing
ISDS, then, would reduce the likelihood that international property rights will be protected, and thereby destabilize that central tenet of the modern, integrated global economic system.
3. An Inward-Looking Approach to Outward-Facing Challenges
Much like the ICS, implementing the Osgoode Plan within the TTIP framework would require some trade-offs. Probable gains in the state sovereignty and Trojan Horse contexts, together with pos-sible slight improvements in terms of consistency, transparency, and adjudication costs, must be balanced against foreseeable increases in investment transaction costs and reductions in both international pri-vate property protections and investor security. Viewed as a plain balancing test, the choice between these countervailing factors seems a relatively straightforward value judgment. But that perspective overlooks important contextual factors central to the entire TTIP en-terprise.
By proposing a fundamentally inward-looking approach to the adjudication of investor-state disputes, the Osgoode Plan offers a solution that is countervailing to the objectives of globalization and international investment. Perhaps blinded by their “vitriolic opposi-tion” to ISDS,
159 the Osgoode Group would have TTIP’s negotiators
chip away at international property rights protections, one of the cen-tral tenets of international economic law. Such a result should be ab-horrent to any supporter of global economic integration. For that rea-son, the Osgoode Plan should only be considered as a possible substitute for ISDS under TTIP if no other system proves desirable and/or politically feasible.
B. A Rule-of-Law Ratings Mechanism
Just prior to the Commission’s September 2015 release of its ICS proposal, John Gaffney wrote an article recommending an alter-
158. See, e.g., Hernando De Soto, Introduction by Hernando De Soto, INT’L PROP. RTS.
INDEX 2016, http://internationalpropertyrightsindex.org/introduction (last visited Nov. 29,
2016).
159. JOSÉ E. ALVAREZ, THE PUBLIC INTERNATIONAL LAW REGIME GOVERNING
INTERNATIONAL INVESTMENT 345 (2011).
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native solution to ISDS’s troubles: the establishment of a “rule-of-law ratings mechanism” (“the Rule-of-Law Proposal”).
160 Much like
modern sovereign rating systems, which call upon third-party agen-cies to assess a country’s creditworthiness based on its “capacity and willingness . . . to repay commercial debt obligations in full and on time,”
161 rule-of-law ratings would indicate whether “there is a sub-
stantial risk that the rule of law would not be upheld . . . by the do-mestic courts of the host country” were it to become implicated in an investment dispute.
162 Similar ratings systems are already published
by a variety of sources,163
and their proper application has been the subject of several commissions and reports, including a 2011 imple-mentation guide published by the U.N. Department of Peacekeeping Operations and the High Commissioner for Human Rights.
164 But
the Rule-of-Law Proposal would go a step further—it offers coun-tries the opportunity to incorporate such a ranking mechanism into future IIAs and to require that investors bring future disputes through the best-ranked venue available.
165 In other words, as the quality of
rule-of-law in a host country’s domestic courts fluctuates relative to ISDS, investors and states would have a built-in method for deter-mining whether investor-state disputes “should be resolved by na-tional courts or [ISDS].”
166
Gaffney’s idea for a ratings mechanism seems to flow from a similar theoretical impression of ISDS as the Osgoode Plan—namely, that the ISDS system “suffers from flaws” that render it un-workable in its current form and that a drastic remodeling of the in-vestor-state legal relationship is required to ensure “that investment
160. Gaffney, supra note 144.
161. Ashok Vir Bhatia, Sovereign Credit Ratings Methodology: An Evaluation 4 (Int’l
Monetary Fund, Working Paper No. WP/02/170, 2002), https://www.imf.org/external/
pubs/ft/wp/2002/wp02170.pdf.
162. Gaffney, supra note 144, at 1.
163. See, e.g., WORLD JUSTICE PROJECT, supra note 133; The 2015 EU Justice
Scoreboard, COM (2015) 116 final (2015).
164. U.N. DEP’T OF PEACEKEEPING OPERATIONS & OFFICE OF THE U.N. HIGH COMM’R
FOR HUMAN RIGHTS, THE UNITED NATIONS RULE OF LAW INDICATORS: IMPLEMENTATION
GUIDE AND PROJECT TOOLS (2011), http://www.un.org/en/peacekeeping/publications/un_
rule_of_law_indicators.pdf.
165. In his piece, Gaffney does not define exactly how a rule-of-law ratings mechanism
would be incorporated into future IIAs, or how such a mechanism would guide the forum
choice for investor-state disputes. The interpretation presented above—that investors would
be forced to bring disputes before the highest-ranking tribunal available—is therefore but
one possibility of how an effective Rule-of-Law Proposal could theoretically be structured.
166. Gaffney, supra note 144, at 1.
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disputes [are] resolved in accordance with the rule of law.”167
How-ever, whereas the Osgoode Plan responds by forcing investors to al-ways adjudicate future claims in the host country’s domestic courts, the ratings mechanism would provide a creative method for deter-mining whether, in certain circumstances, the admittedly flawed ISDS system might still be the best vehicle for settling investor-state disputes.
168 This solution also stems in part from Gaffney’s predic-
tion that developing countries’ domestic court systems are more like-ly than their developed-country counterparts to not “satisfy” the rule-of-law ratings criteria, meaning investors in those regions will require increased protections.
169
1. Rule-of-Law Ratings and the TTIP Agreement
Practically speaking, the Rule-of-Law Proposal would be un-likely to have much of an impact on the adjudication of TTIP-related investor-state disputes. Given the relative sophistication of the EU and U.S. courts, we would expect that most TTIP Member State’s domestic court systems are already more credible, independent, and transparent options than ISDS proceedings. Therefore, assuming in-vestors value those qualities in a legal setting,
170 these domestic
courts are likely already the primary venue for investor-state dispute settlement under the current ISDS regime. Integrating the Rule-of-Law Proposal into TTIP, then, would simply codify a switch that in-vestors have already made of their own accord, and would have no net impact on the consistency, predictability, transparency, or adjudi-cation costs associated with investor-state dispute settlement.
That said, including a rule-of-law ratings mechanism in TTIP would likely reduce investment transaction costs by providing inves-tors with reliable, no-cost information about potential host countries’ legal systems. Such information-sharing would reduce the unknowns involved in making speculative investment decisions, and could pro-vide investors peace of mind should they choose to invest in a TTIP
167. Id. at 2.
168. Critics may respond that classifying the Rule-of-Law Proposal as an “alternative”
to ISDS is disingenuous or, possibly, a mischaracterization of the plan’s intentions. After
all, the ratings system would not do away with the ISDS regime, and in some ways might
lead to its further entrenchment. However, the Rule-of-Law Proposal still represents an
alternative to the current ISDS-dominated regime insofar as it would formally codify
investors’ forum choice calculus, requiring that they bring suit in the venue most likely to
provide both parties with a fair, consistent, and transparent adjudicative process.
169. Gaffney, supra note 144, at 3.
170. See supra note 153 and accompanying text.
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Member State that, for one reason or another, fails to satisfy the rule-of-law criteria.
171 Alternatively, for investors in countries with more
stable court systems, the Rule-of-Law Proposal would both make clear that ISDS is a sub-optimal venue for resolving disputes and compel investors to seek out adjudication in domestic courts. Thus, the Rule-of-Law Proposal could provide a net improvement over the status quo if it can reliably indicate to investors when ISDS proceed-ings will prove more reliable, consistent, and independent than do-mestic courts.
On the other hand, the Rule-of-Law Proposal offers only par-tial answers to other of ISDS’s critics. For example, by leaving open the possibility that claims against Hungary, Albania, and Poland (among others)
172 will remain in the currently appeal-less ISDS sys-
tem, the Proposal would continue to allow the resolution of disputes without any appellate review. Similarly, incorporating rule-of-law ratings into TTIP could unequally perpetuate the state sovereignty and Trojan Horse problems, by allowing investors in worse-ranked countries to continue using ISDS to challenge public health, envi-ronmental, and social regulations. To his credit, Gaffney fully under-stands the ISDS-related consequences of his proposal, and writes, “[T]he development of a rule-of-law rating would have to proceed hand-in-hand with ongoing reforms of the ISDS.”
173 Within the
TTIP context, then, the Rule-of-Law Proposal can perhaps be best understood as an individual component of a broader reform package aimed at the entire ISDS system.
174
171. Though such a possibility may seem far-fetched, a recent study placed Hungary
and Albania, both EU Member States and potential TTIP signatories, forty-ninth and
seventy-second, respectively, in its global rule-of-law rankings, putting them behind South
Africa, Ghana, and the United Arab Emirates. WORLD JUSTICE PROJECT, supra note 133, at
5. Additionally, at the time of this writing, the European Commission was in the early
stages of an “unprecedented” investigation into the rule-of-law in Poland, after a
controversial piece of Polish legislation “overhaul[ed] the constitutional tribunal” (Poland’s
highest court), undermining its ability to restrain executive powers. Jennifer Rankin,
Brussels Launches Unprecedented EU Inquiry into Rule of Law in Poland, GUARDIAN
(London) (Jan. 13, 2016), http://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/jan/13/ec-to-investigate-
polish-governments-controversial-new-laws. A few months later, the EU granted Poland
more time to solve the “constitutional crisis,” stating that “it was not about to escalate its
unprecedented investigation into whether government policies were threatening the rule of
law.” Gabriela Baczynska & Jakub Iglewski, EU Gives Poland More Time in Rule of Law
Investigation, REUTERS, May 24, 2016, http://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-poland-constitution-
eu-schinas-idUKKCN0YF17Y. Given the Commission’s recent shift in focus to the Brexit,
a resolution could still be several months off.
172. See supra note 171 and accompanying text.
173. Gaffney, supra note 144, at 2.
174. See infra Part III.C.3.
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2. Other Complications Inherent in the Rule-of-Law Proposal
Adopting the Rule-of-Law Proposal within TTIP could in-volve significant logistical complications. The effectiveness of an international ratings system relies primarily upon its reputation, which is in turn a function of its “simplicity and comparability” as well as its “perceived analytical strength and independence.”
175 A
newly manufactured system, even one based on well-vetted and widely accepted criteria, will inevitably be viewed with more suspi-cion than, say, the centuries-old Moody’s or Standard & Poor’s indi-ces. This is especially true in light of the fact that the Rule-of-Law Proposal would require, in order to be most effective, a means of weighting its overall rankings in favor of those rule-of-law-related indicators that most impact investment protection.
176
Incorporating the Rule-of-Law Proposal into TTIP would also require that lawmakers either establish a “threshold level . . . beyond which ISDS would no longer be appropriate to resolve investment disputes,”
177 or develop a means by which a ratings agency could
classify the ISDS system along the same rule-of-law parameters. Without such a benchmark, there would be no way to determine the point at which a host country’s domestic courts no longer provide a more consistent, independent, and transparent venue for investor-state dispute resolution than ISDS. Either of the determinations listed above would inevitably involve a high degree of ambiguity, making it very likely that political and other non-rational concerns would come into play. Although some of these concerns might be worth considering, the current political firestorm against all things ISDS could skew the benchmarking process. If nothing else, finding acceptable solutions to each of the foregoing logistical concerns will likely take a substantial amount of compromise and trial-and-error—both of which could require more time than TTIP’s negotiators are willing to spend.
Logistical problems notwithstanding, the Rule-of-Law Pro-posal would likely give rise to several beneficial side-effects. For example, adopting a formalized model for objectively evaluating rule-of-law in individual host countries, then tying those countries’ investment futures to that same evaluation, could provide an enor-
175. Bhatia, supra note 161, at 3.
176. For example, in the Polish case, such a mechanism would need to determine first,
whether the controversial new legislation would affect the country’s overall rule-of-law, and
next, whether and to what extent that legislation will specifically impact current and
potential investors. See supra note 171.
177. Gaffney, supra note 144, at 2.
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mous incentive for countries to improve and liberalize their domestic legal structures. Simultaneously, the “threat” of being forced to re-sort to the old ISDS system if their domestic courts fail to satisfy a rule-of-law rating might encourage host countries to continue work-ing to improve and reform ISDS. In that way, one could argue that the Rule-of-Law Proposal introduces a creative solution to the cur-rent ISDS controversy. It occupies a clever middle-ground between the countervailing needs of protecting state sovereignty and ensuring investor security, all while maintaining a distinctly globalized out-look regarding the cross-border investment agenda.
3. A Finite Improvement
On its own, the Rule-of-Law Proposal would not do much to alter the scope of investor-state dispute resolution under TTIP. Alt-hough it would help reduce investment unknowns while compelling investors to utilize the optimal forum for dispute resolution, without simultaneous reforms of ISDS, the Proposal risks perpetuating the sovereignty, Trojan Horse, and appellate mechanism problems inher-ent in the current system. However, assuming such reforms are plau-sible and that the logistical problems with establishing an effective rule-of-law ratings mechanism can be overcome, a ratings mecha-nism could prove a hitherto untapped source of legitimacy and crea-tive problem solving in the realm of investor-state disputes.
C. Reforming the Existing ISDS Framework
Arguably the most obvious “alternative” framework for in-vestor-state dispute resolution would be a reformed and updated ver-sion of the existing ISDS regime. However, in order for such an op-tion to prove viable under TTIP, especially given ISDS’s recent run of unpopularity amongst EU and U.S. lawmakers and citizens, it must provide practicable reforms addressing each of its seven cri-tiques, namely that ISDS is: (1) nontransparent; (2) costly; (3) nei-ther independent nor impartial; (4) detrimental to state sovereignty and regulatory authority; (5) an enabler of Trojan Horse-type chal-lenges; (6) inconsistent and unpredictable; and (7) lacking an appel-late mechanism. By introducing into the ISDS system a few straight-forward reforms, each falling under one of four broad categories, lawmakers could fully address all of these concerns while simultane-ously revitalizing the public’s perception of investor-state dispute resolution.
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1. Transparency
If EU and U.S. lawmakers choose to keep ISDS in TTIP, they should follow the European Commission’s example and mandate that any future arbitrations follow the UNCITRAL Rules on Transparen-cy in Treaty-based Investor-State Arbitration.
178 As noted above,
179
the UNCITRAL Rules provide the most state-of-the-art regulatory model available, representing the work of the world’s foremost dip-lomats and scholars of international law. Additionally, negotiators should incorporate into TTIP and other future BITs specific language “[g]uaranteeing the transparency of the [dispute-resolution] process, including access by the public, the posting of documents, and the ability of arbitration panels to summon outside experts and parties of interest to make submissions.”
180 Not only would doing so establish
consistent and ambitious standards of accountability and openness in future investor-state arbitrations—thereby increasing the possibility that future arbitrators’ decisions would be more impartial and inde-pendent—it would also represent to EU and U.S. citizens a new commitment to transparency in ISDS.
2. Cost-Reduction Strategies
Arguably, the ICS’s most appealing innovation is its stream-lined, standardized approach, which incorporates “clear procedural deadlines to ensure fast dispute settlement and to keep costs low.”
181
However, standardizing the settlement process will, by definition, de-stroy the benefits conferred by ISDS’s ad hoc structure, including, most notably, the right of both parties to a dispute to compromise on a non-partisan arbitral panel. But if TTIP’s negotiators adopted three straightforward structural reforms, they could reduce the costs asso-ciated with the existing ISDS regime while preserving the benefits derived from the regime’s essential nature. Those reforms are: (1) imposing a cap on ISDS’s administrative fees; (2) establishing mini-mum-business requirements; and (3) introducing procedural safe-guards against frivolous claims.
First, TTIP’s negotiators could impose caps on ISDS’s ad-
178. Such a mandate, in order to seem legitimate, could automatically invalidate any
awards handed down by an arbitral tribunal that fails to comply with UNCITRAL’s
transparency requirements. UNCITRAL Rules on Transparency, supra note 75.
179. See supra Part II.A.2.
180. SAPIRO, supra note 13, at 17.
181. European Commission Fact Sheet, supra note 69.
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ministrative fees. Taking the ICSID rules as a guide, negotiators might mandate a maximum daily fee payable to arbitrators. These daily fee caps have proven extremely successful in the ICSID con-text, and are credited with reducing ICSID’s median tribunal costs by nearly twenty-four percent compared to UNCITRAL.
182 Adopting
similar constraints in TTIP would ensure against out-of-control ad-ministrative costs while reducing the possibility of arbitrator corrup-tion in the decision-making process, thus increasing the likelihood that arbitrators will render their decisions in an independent and im-partial manner.
Second, the TTIP agreement could be drafted to require that investors, as a prerequisite to filing an ISDS suit against a particular host country, have a significant business presence within that coun-try. Defining what constitutes “significant” might get contentious, but should center on objective measurements of either the investor’s market share within the host country or the percentage of the inves-tor’s overall business conducted within the host country. This dual-operative definition will allow both MNEs and SMEs alike to have potential access to ISDS, while ensuring that investors with only a very minor stake in the host country are not able to bring Trojan Horse suits aimed at derailing the state’s regulatory processes.
Finally, certain procedural safeguards could be included in TTIP to ensure the speedy resolution of frivolous or otherwise non-meritorious claims. For example, TTIP’s negotiators could embrace CETA’s approach, which includes a “fast track system” for non-meritorious claims to be thrown out “at [the Tribunal’s] first session or promptly thereafter”, ideally within a matter of weeks.
183 Addi-
tionally, they might consider adopting mandatory fee-shifting provi-sions aimed at discouraging investors from bringing claims with no reasonable chance of success on the merits. These provisions should be modeled after the “British” rule, “which requires the losing party to pay the winning party’s costs in addition to his own.”
184 In addi-
tion to safeguarding against frivolous and non-meritorious claims,
182. Hodgson, supra note 98.
183. Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement, supra note 118, at arts. 8.32–
8.33; see also EUR. COMM’N, INVESTMENT PROVISIONS IN THE EU-CANADA FREE TRADE
AGREEMENT (CETA) (Sept. 26, 2014), http://trade.ec.europa.eu/doclib/docs/2013/november/
tradoc_151918.pdf.
184. Keith N. Hylton, Fee Shifting and Incentives to Comply with the Law, 46 VAND. L.
REV. 1069, 1071 (1993). Although most commentators agree that a pro-plaintiff fee-shifting
rule (i.e. one in which only prevailing plaintiffs recover fees) best aligns the interests of both
plaintiffs and defendants and “generates the greatest incentive to comply with the law,” id.,
the specific circumstances of ISDS (and the rampant claims that the system unduly inhibits
state sovereignty) make the British rule a better option within this context.
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such a fee-shifting regime would also protect state sovereignty and deter Trojan Horse suits. Under the British rule, states that feel as though an ISDS claim infringes upon their legitimate regulatory rights need not worry about the costs associated with defending their position, given that they can recoup those costs upon their successful resolution of the dispute.
3. Regulatory Safeguards
If TTIP’s negotiators want to retain the ISDS regime, they will need to find a credible, persuasive way to convince the agree-ment’s member States that investor-state disputes will not inhibit their regulatory powers. The most obvious way to do so would be to reaffirm in the text of the agreement the right of the EU and United States to adopt regulatory measures dealing with specific social, envi-ronmental, and health concerns. Although deciding how to formulate such a reaffirmation could get contentious, the “legitimate policy ob-jectives” language employed by General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (“GATT”) and the Agreement on Technical Barriers to Trade (“TBT Agreement”), not to mention the Commission’s ICS proposal, provides a well-known, heavily litigated, and relatively permissive jumping-off point.
185 EU and U.S. diplomats will likely wrangle
over whether to include concepts like “social protection” and “pro-tection of cultural diversity” under the legitimacy umbrella,
186 but
those discussions hardly seem divisive enough to derail the negotia-tions. Importantly, the agreement should also stipulate that investor claims which disregard the “legitimate policy objectives” language will be placed on the “fast track” to dismissal. Establishing a zero-tolerance policy would both reassure states of their sovereignty and prevent any attempt by investors to initiate a Trojan Horse suit.
4. A Multilateral ISDS Appellate Mechanism
Most of the reforms proposed so far have already been incor-porated, in full or in part, into existing BITs.
187 But if ISDS is to re-
185. See supra note 118 and accompanying text.
186. SAPIRO, supra note 13, at 12.
187. The 2012 U.S. Model BIT, for example, introduced ISDS provisions related to
transparency, third-party participation, and dispute prevention. 2012 Model BIT, supra note
122. In addition, CETA, the freshly negotiated trade and investment agreement between the
European Union and Canada, incorporates into its ISDS structure even more stringent
transparency requirements than the U.S. Model BIT, Comprehensive Economic and Trade
Agreement, supra note 118, art. 8.36, along with a prohibition of parallel proceedings in
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main the primary mechanism for solving investor-state disputes, it must develop a novel, workable system for appellate review. As dis-cussed in Part II.B.2, above, the ICS’s novel proposition for a bilat-eral EU-U.S. appellate tribunal could prove dangerous if the judge-selection process were to be captured by state interests. Indeed, any appellate mechanism borne of a bilateral investment agreement risks such capture, given that its terms and procedures must inevitably be decided by a tiny consortium of at least nominally likeminded states. Furthermore, future investor-complainants may not have an oppor-tunity to raise their concerns during the drafting process of a bilateral agreement, especially if, unlike TTIP, it “suffers” from a substantial lack of media attention. The solution, as is so often the case in the realm of international law, is to think bigger.
A multilateral investment appeals court, the rough parameters for which could be based on the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court,
188 would address each of the foregoing concerns.
Broadening the membership of the court by situating it within a mul-tilateral agreement would make the judge-selection process more democratic, thus alleviating some of the concerns over capture. Though judges would still be appointed by the states, the importance of the appointments and the sheer number of states involved in the selections process would both deter the nomination of partisan candi-dates and encourage investors to lobby their host government regard-ing its voting decision.
189 Moreover, the court’s jurisdiction could be
subject to certain limitations, much like the ICC’s, in order to ensure that neither states nor investors would be forced into an unfair adju-dicatory process. For example, parties to an investor-state dispute might be required to both agree, prior to the initial arbitration, wheth-er or not their eventual settlement will be subject to appellate re-view.
190 In addition, the appellate court’s charter could be drafted so
domestic courts, id. arts. 8.22, 8.24, and a fast-track system for rejecting frivolous investor
claims. Id. arts. 8.32–8.33.
188. See Rome Statute, supra note 136.
189. Critics will likely argue that adding more States Parties to the court would do little
to affect the possibility of capture. They might also claim that, even if investors could affect
their host government’s nomination and voting decisions, they would not be properly
incentivized to spend the time and money to do so. These critiques have some merit, but
only if considered in a vacuum. Given the choice between a bilateral appellate court (like
the ICS) and a multilateral one, the latter clearly provides a substantially better opportunity
at avoiding capture.
190. Such a clause could mirror Rule A-1 of the American Arbitration Association's
2013 Optional Appellate Arbitration Rules. AMERICAN ARBITRATION ASS’N, OPTIONAL
APPELLATE ARBITRATION RULES 5 (Nov. 1, 2013), https://www.adr.org/aaa/ShowProperty?
nodeId=/UCM/ADRSTAGE2016218&revision=latestreleased.
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as to respect domestic courts’ jurisdiction191
over strict contractual disputes and require consolidation of related cases,
192 which would
both protect state sovereignty and cut down on incidences of parallel proceedings.
193
Such an investment appeals court would also promote in-creased consistency and predictability in future investor-state dis-putes. By beginning the process of developing an international body of investment law, the court could help drive the jurisprudential de-bate regarding, for example, the scope of the Most-Favored Nation clause and the definition of “unfair and inequitable treatment.”
194
The publication and awareness of this body of law would only be helped along by sensible transparency requirements, like those rec-ommended in Part III.C.1, above. In addition, the court’s decisions would effectively act as binding precedent on even ad hoc arbitral tribunals, whose settlement decisions could be subject to reversal if antithetical to the court’s guidance. This precedential case law would greatly increase the predictability of ISDS awards, while simultane-ously incentivizing arbitrators to think twice before basing arbitral decisions on partisan or biased arguments, given the possibility that their decisions could be publicly criticized by a well-respected group of their own peers.
Of course, a multilateral appellate court’s precedential value would diminish if states and investors were given the opportunity to opt out of appellate review, as proposed above. Worse, were the court’s judges to sense this possibility, they might modulate their de-cision-making to ensure the court’s continued relevance. This prob-lem offers no easy answer, but there are reasons to believe its effect will not be too severe. First and foremost, if a multilateral appellate body is coupled with comprehensive transparency and reporting re-
191. Cf. Rome Statute, supra note 136, art. 17(1)(a) (establishing that the International
Criminal Court is bound by the principle of complementarity, meaning it may only assert
jurisdiction over a criminal matter in the absence of domestic proceedings).
192. ICC Rules of Arbitration, INT’L CHAMBER OF COMMERCE art. 10(c), http://www.
iccwbo.org/products-and-services/arbitration-and-adr/arbitration/icc-rules-of-arbitration/
(last visited Dec. 2, 2016) (providing for the unilateral consolidation of general commercial
arbitrations when "the arbitrations are between the same parties, the disputes in the arbitra-
tions arise in connection with the same legal relationship, and the Court finds the arbitration
agreements to be compatible").
193. Katia Yannaca-Small, Improving the System of Investor-State Dispute Settlement
(OECD Working Papers on Int'l Inv., Paper No. 2006/01, 2006), https://www.oecd.org/
china/WP-2006_1.pdf (discussing the dangers of parallel proceedings and forum shopping in
investor-state dispute settlement mechanisms, and arguing that the consolidation of like
cases is a desirable, if logistically challenging, solution).
194. See supra Part I.A.
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224 COLUMBIA JOURNAL OF TRANSNATIONAL LAW [55:178
quirements, then arbitral decisions that are unsound or against prece-dent will be readily identifiable. Though that will not help the affect-ed parties, future disputants will know to avoid those particular arbi-trators (or risk aberrant results). In fact, the very presence of a widely accepted body of applicable law will likely dissuade arbitra-tors from making divergent decisions, lest they torpedo their own ca-reer.
195 Additionally, the evidence cited above
196 suggests that both
states and investors are predisposed to prefer more consistent and predictable forms of investor-state adjudication. Therefore, so long as the court is not blatantly biased in either states’ or investors’ favor, most disputants will opt into its jurisdictional purview.
5. Timing and Political Will
Two additional concerns spring to mind when considering the foregoing reforms, especially the multilateral appellate court: timing and political will. As to timing, the relevant question is whether the proposed reforms can make it through the negotiation process in time for the signing of the TTIP agreement. Given that the transparency requirements, cost-reduction strategies, and state regulatory safe-guards have some precedent in international negotiations of this type and would require nothing more than bilateral commitments from the TTIP Member States, they should be negotiable in time for TTIP. The multilateral appellate mechanism, on the other hand, is another story entirely.
Negotiations over the ICC took about two and a half years and only began after protracted debates in the U.N. surrounding the “ICC issue.”
197 Still, diplomats widely viewed the passage of the
Rome Statute as a near-miracle, and after the confirmation vote “abandoned themselves to cheers and chants, tears and embraces, and
195. All ISDS regimes allow the complainant and respondent-state to jointly select their
arbitrators, either by agreeing on a single arbitrator or by each appointing one arbitrator to a
three-arbitrator panel, then empowering those individuals to appoint a third. LATEK, supra
note 23, at 3. Thus, arbitrators have very little long-term job security, at least within the
arbitration field. Making all arbitral decisions public through comprehensive transparency
requirements would, as a result, provide an important check on arbitrator decision-making—
an arbitrator’s career prospects could very well depend on the quality of his or her reasoning
in any given dispute.
196. See supra note 153 and accompanying text.
197. John Washburn, The Negotiation of the Rome Statute for the International
Criminal Court and International Lawmaking in the 21st Century, 11 PACE INT’L L. REV.
361, 362–63 (1999); see also Fanny Benedetti & John L. Washburn, Drafting the
International Criminal Court Treaty: Two Years to Rome and an Afterward on the Rome
Diplomatic Conference, 5 GLOBAL GOVERNANCE 1 (1999).
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rhythmic stomping and applause.”198
Even if we assume that a multi-lateral investment appeals court would have the same diplomatic and popular backing—and given the recent contentiousness of ISDS, that would be quite a stretch—practically speaking there is simply not enough time to get it done for TTIP. President Barack Obama will leave office in January 2017, and the EU’s top negotiator, Cecilia Malmström, has publicly stated that she hopes to have completed talks by that time.
199
As to political will, even if TTIP’s negotiators believed the ISDS system could be reformed, they would almost certainly refuse to consider it. ISDS has become an enormously hot-button topic in recent years,
200 and any politician making an even remotely ISDS-
oriented proposal to the TTIP agreement risks getting caught up in the cultural and media backlash. Nor has this resistance been limited solely to ISDS. In early 2016, the German Association of Judges came out against the Commission’s ICS proposal, arguing that there was “neither a legal basis nor an actual need for such a court,” and that “creating special courts for certain groups of litigants would be a mistake.”
201 Of course, negotiators could try to rename ISDS or ini-
tiate an advertising campaign to rehabilitate its image, but the pre-vailing political wisdom seems to indicate that the system is a lost cause.
202
6. Theory Meets Practice
Taken as a whole, the foregoing analysis presents quite a co-nundrum. Only a very few practicable, common-sense reforms are needed in order for ISDS to answer nearly all of the critiques that have been hurled at it. Adopting new rules on transparency and cost-control would together increase the consistency and independence of ISDS adjudications, while updated language on sovereignty would effectively safeguard states’ regulatory rights. If coupled with a mul-tilateral appeals mechanism and rule-of-law ratings, these reforms could usher in a new era of legitimacy and effectiveness in the realm of investment law. But public sentiment regarding ISDS remains at
198. Washburn, The Negotiation of the Rome Statute, supra note 197, at 361.
199. Christopher Ziedler, Malmström: We Can Finish TTIP During the Obama
Administration, EURACTIV (Nov. 16, 2015), http://www.euractiv.com/section/trade-society/
interview/malmstrom-we-can-finish-ttip-during-the-obama-administration.
200. See supra Part I.A.
201. TTIP Trade Talks, supra note 11 (internal quotation marks omitted).
202. Id.
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226 COLUMBIA JOURNAL OF TRANSNATIONAL LAW [55:178
an all-time low,203
and the world’s political leaders have proven themselves unwilling to consider any option even remotely related to the existing system.
204 TTIP’s negotiators are therefore stuck in a
sort of limbo—though incorporating an updated and reformed ISDS system into the TTIP agreement theoretically presents the best avail-able alternative to the current regime, only a miraculous shift in pub-lic perception would render that option practicable.
CONCLUSION
It would be tempting to argue, given the futility of supporting a reformed version of ISDS for TTIP, that the Commission’s ICS proposal presents the best available compromise. The analysis in Part II above indicated that the ICS will likely usher in improvements in transparency, cost-control, and regulatory security, and the plan was drafted and has the backing of one of the major diplomatic bod-ies involved in the negotiations. Might TTIP’s negotiators be better off, then, incorporating the ICS into the agreement, securing that progress, and continuing to work towards a more lasting solution to the problems inherent in investor-state dispute adjudications?
Put simply, the answer is no. If ISDS’s current straits should teach us anything, it is that public opinion regarding government sys-tems can rapidly deteriorate in the apparently contentious realm of investment protection. And if the ICS—the Commission’s appointed standard-bearer for the future of investor-state relations and an in-tended trial-run for an international investment court—fails to live up to expectations, it might jeopardize similar future diplomatic projects. The risk that ICS’s judges would be beholden to state interests, and that the Commission’s proposal would thereby unduly reallocate too much adjudicatory power to the states, is simply too great for TTIP’s negotiators to chance it.
203. Simon Lester, The ISDS Controversy: How We Got Here and Where Next, INT’L
CTR. FOR TRADE & SUSTAINABLE DEV. (June 1, 2016), http://www.ictsd.org/opinion/the-isds-
controversy-how-we-got-here-and-where-next; Commission Staff Working Document,
Report: Online Public Consultation on Investment Protection and Investor-to-State Dispute
Settlement (ISDS) in the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership Agreement (TTIP),
at 9, 14 (Jan. 13, 2015), http://trade.ec.europa.eu/doclib/docs/2015/january/tradoc_153044.
pdf (detailing the results of an online public consultation regarding TTIP and ISDS, which
received responses from an “unprecedented” number of EU citizens and revealed “wide-
spread opposition to [ISDS] in TTIP or in general”).
204. Julie Levy-Abegnoli, No TTIP Deal with ISDS, Warns Parliament, PARLIAMENT
MAG. (May 7, 2015), https://www.theparliamentmagazine.eu/articles/news/no-ttip-deal-isds-
warns-parliament.
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In the absence of any viable alternative, then, TTIP’s negotia-tors should follow the Osgoode Group’s advice and grant courts in the EU and United States primary authority to adjudicate whatever investor-state disputes are cognizable under domestic law, while leaving the remainder to private ordering. They might also attach a clause noting that the agreement’s investment protection provisions would be subject to renegotiation if TTIP’s member states were to agree to a more permanent solution in the future. After all, in order to be ratified, the TTIP agreement will need a plan for dealing with investment protection and investor-state disputes. And despite the many drawbacks associated with a return to the pre-ISDS era,
205 such
a strategy would take arguably the most contentious issue off the ta-ble, making it easier for negotiators to come to terms on a bilateral agreement poised to generate overall economic gains in excess of €119 billion (approximately $129 billion) for the EU and €95 billion (approximately $103 billion) for the United States.
206
Meanwhile, diplomats could begin working on more viable long-term strategies for solving future investor-state disputes, most notably through the creation of an international appellate body. If these efforts prove successful, the reformed version of ISDS laid out above could then be reintroduced into future BITs, assuming the widespread antipathy felt towards the system subsides over time. Despite its current predicament, an updated take on ISDS offers the best prospects for solving the current problems in the investor-state dispute resolution system and represents the optimal path forward for international investment law.
Robert W. Schwieder*
205. See supra Part III.A.3.
206. JOSEPH FRANCOIS ET AL., REDUCING TRANSATLANTIC BARRIERS TO TRADE AND
INVESTMENT: AN ECONOMIC ASSESSMENT, at vii (2013), http://trade.ec.europa.eu/doclib/
docs/2013/march/tradoc_150737.pdf; see supra note 83 and accompanying text.
* J.D. Candidate, Columbia Law School, Class of 2017; L.L.M. Candidate, The
London School of Economics and Political Science, Class of 2017. The author would like to
thank Professor Petros Mavroidis for his invaluable assistance and feedback.
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